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Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi speaks in Libya on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011. A fire burns in a street in the Libyan capital Tripoli in the early hours Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011 in this image taken from TV. (AP / APTN) An army soldier and anti-regime residents pose for photos in front of a tank in the early hours of Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011 in Benghazi, Libya. (AP / Alaguri) Anti-government protesters demonstrate in the street in the Libyan capital Tripoli in the early hours Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011 in this image taken from TV. (AP / APTN) Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is shown in this video image broadcast on Libyan state television early Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Libyan State Television) A Libyan citizen in Serbia waving an old Libyan flag during a protest against Moammar Gadhafi in front of the embassy in Belgrade, Serbia, on Tuesday, Feb. 22. 2011. (AP / Darko Vojinovic) Libyan protesters Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi speaks in Libya on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011.

Gadhafi vows to die a martyr on Libyan soil

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CTV News Video

CTV National News: Paul Workman reports
Moammar Gadhafi grew even more aggressive today vowing to fight till his death and comparing the protesters to cockroaches.
Power Play: Ibrahim Sahad, secretary general
The secretary general for the National Front for Salvation of Libya believes it is a matter of hours that we will see the end of Gadhafi, the dictator in Libya. But he also believes help from the international community is essential.
CTV News Channel: Moammar Gadhafi speaks
The Libyan leader says he will be martyred before he could be made to leave Libya. He says his people's expression of the Libyan revolution is mistaken and that young people have been manipulated by Tunisians who have offered money and drugs to send them down the wrong path.
Power Play: Paul Heinbecker, former ambassador
Paul Heinbecker, the former Canadian Ambassador to the U.N. believes although Canada didn't act forcefully enough in the Egypt crisis, Canada has picked up in the Libyan conflict but there is room for more involvement; perhaps in the Security Council meeting.
CTV News Channel: Alessandro Bruno, analyst
The deputy editor of the North Africa Journal responds to Gadhafi's remarks about dying a martyr, saying he hasn't shown much courage in the past.
CTV News Channel: Karim Misuraty, protester
A protester in Libya says it is not the military firing upon demonstrators but it's mercenaries on behalf of Gadhafi. He says he will continue to protest until Gadhafi resigns.
Extended: Gunfire rings out in Liyba
Gunfire erupts amid ongoing unrest in the streets of Libya, as protesters call for the resignation of Libyan Leader Moammar Gadhafi.
Extended: Protests continue in Libya
Tuesday: Smoke is seen above the skyline of Libya's capital as anti-government protests continue.
CTV News Channel: Edward Shebani, businessman
A Canadian businessman stranded in Libya says he is safe where he is currently staying, but he cannot go outside due to gunfire ringing throughout the streets. He says his flight was cancelled and he is hoping the Canadian government will evacuate him soon.
Canada AM: Martin Seemungal in Jerusalem
CTV's Middle East bureau chief says Moammar Gadhafi is standing firm to his statement, saying he will not step down from his position. He also explains how even the military is growing angry with him.
Canada AM: Alan Bell, security expert
The entire country is governed by a very small family, says a security expert. He also explains how unlike Tunisia and Egypt's uprisings, the Libyan government will have the most vicious response to protests yet.

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Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi speaks in Libya on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011. A fire burns in a street in the Libyan capital Tripoli in the early hours Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011 in this image taken from TV. (AP / APTN) An army soldier and anti-regime residents pose for photos in front of a tank in the early hours of Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011 in Benghazi, Libya. (AP / Alaguri) Anti-government protesters demonstrate in the street in the Libyan capital Tripoli in the early hours Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011 in this image taken from TV. (AP / APTN) Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is shown in this video image broadcast on Libyan state television early Tuesday Feb. 22, 2011. (AP Photo/Libyan State Television) A Libyan citizen in Serbia waving an old Libyan flag during a protest against Moammar Gadhafi in front of the embassy in Belgrade, Serbia, on Tuesday, Feb. 22. 2011. (AP / Darko Vojinovic) Libyan protesters Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi speaks in Libya on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011.

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Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi speaks in Libya on Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011.

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Date: Tue. Feb. 22 2011 6:04 PM ET

Libya's longtime leader Col. Moammar Gadhafi vowed Tuesday on state television he would die a martyr on Libyan soil rather than flee his country.

Speaking from what appeared to be a bombed-out concrete bunker but was reportedly the front hall of his home, which was attacked by U.S. airstrikes in the 1980s and never repaired, Ghadafi gave a furious, defiant speech during which he repeatedly shook his fist in the air to emphasize his points.

"It's not possible that I leave this place, I will be a martyr at the end," Gadhafi said, through a translator.

Gadhafi, wearing brown robes and a turban, also called on his supporters to reclaim the streets from protesters, whom he described as youths who had been plied with drugs and money by a "small, sick group."

"You men and women who love Gadhafi ... get out of your homes and fill the streets," he said. "Leave your homes and attack them in their lairs."

"The police cordons will be lifted, go out and fight them, for the defence of the revolution and the defence of Gadhafi."

Earlier reports suggested Gadhafi had fled the country but he refuted those reports in televised addresses Monday and Tuesday, claiming he was still in Libya.

Gadhafi also insisted Tuesday that he cannot heed calls to step down because he technically has no official title, and denied ordering police to fire on protesters.

"I haven't ordered a single bullet fired," he said, warning that if he does, "everything will burn."

He vowed that should protests continue, he would organize a "holy march" of his supporters to rid Libya of its anti-Gadhafi elements.

Meanwhile, residents of Libya's capital city Tripoli reported that they were staying inside Tuesday, amid threats that they would be shot if they ventured onto the streets, just like the anti-government protesters who were slain by gunmen the day before.

Scores of dead bodies lay in the streets of Tripoli Tuesday, as pro-Gadhafi gunmen remained ready to shoot anyone seen outside, according to residents who spoke to The Associated Press.

Edward Shebani, a Canadian businessman, told CTV News Channel he was hiding out in a house in Tripoli, unable to leave the residence, let alone flee the country. Shebani said armed groups of men were firing indiscriminately at anyone on the street.

"Right now where we're at is safe but we can't leave the house and go out on the street. All the stores are closed, there's no food supply. The food supply we do have is good for another four days, and that's where we're at," he said.

Shebani said the Canadian consulate advised him to fly out of the country from Tripoli's airport, but flights were cancelled and he was unable to get to the airport due to the danger on the street.

Many of the slain anti-government protesters were killed Monday in the district of Fashloum, an impoverished area within the capital city.

One resident told The Associated Press that the gunmen warned him that they had been given orders to shoot anyone who moves.

"Bodies are now in the streets; those injured and now bleeding can't find a hospital or ambulance to rescue them. Nobody is allowed to get in and if anybody gets in, will be shot to death," the resident said.

CTV Middle East Bureau Chief Martin Seemungal said the latest violence has alienated Libyan soldiers and diplomats alike, leaving Gadhafi with fewer people to rely upon as he tries to stop the uprising against his regime.

"The point now is that there are a lot of angry military people within Libya, so it's not just the diplomats who are fed up with Moammar Gadhafi, it's the military," Seemungal told CTV's Canada AM from Jerusalem on Tuesday.

"More and more elements seem to be turning over towards the opposition. They are just outraged that other elements of the army have been shooting at civilians with live ammunition -- we are hearing reports of aircraft dropping bombs, helicopters firing from the air at these protesters -- so all these things are adding up and only adding to the rage against Moammar Gadhafi."

No confirmation on death tolls

The protester death totals have not been independently confirmed by Western media. New York-based Human Rights Watch estimates that 62 people have been killed in Tripoli since Sunday, on top of the 233 dead the agency previously announced. However, the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights has reported that at least 250 people have been killed in recent days. Hundreds of others have been injured.

Navi Pillay, the head of the UN human rights agency, called for an investigation Tuesday, saying that the attacks on civilians "may amount to crimes against humanity."

World leaders have swiftly condemned the extreme violence used by Gadhafi's regime to quell the unrest inside Libya.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said the Gadhafi regime "is using the most vicious forms of repression against people who want to see that country -- which is one of the most closed and one of the most autocratic -- make progress."

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also called on the Libyan leader to "stop this unacceptable bloodshed." She said the world was watching the unfolding events "with alarm."

The protests have also spurred a number of international oil companies with operations in Libya, one of Europe's major oil suppliers, to remove their workers or their families from the country. Spanish oil company Repsol-YPF announced Tuesday it has suspended production in Libya. The company accounts for about 3.8 per cent of Libya's daily output of 1.6 million barrels.

Three Canadians were among two dozen Suncor employees who were forced to flee the drill rig they work on late Monday because it had been attacked by a group of armed men. Suncor officials said the men made it safely to another oil rig in the desert, and efforts were being made to get them out of Libya.

Diplomats break from Gadhafi

A number of Gadhafi's top diplomatic representatives have turned against him in the midst of the violence being perpetrated against protesters.

Ibrahim Dabbashi, the country's deputy ambassador to the United Nations, has pleaded with Gadhafi to step down from power, warning that if he doesn't "the Libyan people will get rid of him."

He said that Gadhafi deserved to face justice for the ongoing crackdown against the protesters and for "all the other crimes he has committed during the 42 years in power."

Libya's ambassador to the United States also called for Gadhafi to step down, and the ambassadors to India and Bangladesh stepped down from their jobs. The country's ambassador to Indonesia has also reportedly resigned his post in protest of what the regime is doing to the Libyan people.

Ali Aujali, the Libyan ambassador to the U.S., said there is "no other solution" than for Gadhafi to leave.

"He should step down and give the chance for the people to make their future," Aujali told The Associated Press in an interview.

The UN Security Council held an emergency meeting on the situation in Libya Tuesday afternoon, later issuing a statement condemning Gadhafi's violent crackdown on protesters and calling for those responsible for the attacks against civilians to be held accountable for their actions.

In a statement released to the press Tuesday evening, the 15 council members expressed "grave concern" at the situation and called for an "immediate end to the violence." They also said Gadhafi must take steps to address the Libyan people's demands.

Protesters control eastern cities

While Tripoli continues to be a bloody battleground, protesters in the east are celebrating as they claim to have taken control of a number of cities along several hundred kilometres of Libya's Mediterranean coast and into the interior.

Tawfiq al-Shahbi, a protest organizer in the eastern city of Tobruk, said protesters were raising the pre-Gadhafi Libyan flag on public buildings in Tobruk and Benghazi, the country's second largest city and a focal point of the protests.

Protesters have also reportedly taken control of Ajdabiya, an important city in the middle of Libya's oil fields. Local residents are working together to guard facilities there, as well as local streets and roadways.

But in Benghazi, as in Tripoli, local residents still feared reprisals from pro-Gadhafi militias. While residents took control of police stations and the local security headquarters, as well as the streets, a local doctor said they remained in their homes Tuesday night.

"We know that although we are in control of the city, Gadhafi loyalists are still here hiding and they can do anything anytime," he said.

With files from The Associated Press

Comments are now closed for this story

Old Ted
said
0 0

He had better look up the meaning of martyr. He will die a cold blooded killer, power hungry tyrant and nothing else. Martyr, not even close. The sooner the likes of him are gone the better. The only problem is, they are usually replaced by as bad or worse. We can only hope.


Wayne
said
0 0

What he just said sounds alot like what Hitler said so long ago....We all know how that turned out.


firstMickey
said
0 0

Martyr, my eye. Try murderer who is getting his just deserts. And way too late.


Eric
said
0 0

Kadhafi and Chavez would make a great pair!


James
said
0 0

Amen to what Dwight said. We have it pretty good in Canada and the U.S., compared to most of the world.


Ron S
said
0 0

Don't worry Mr. Gadhafi. I am certain that there are a lot of your countrymen lining up to grant your wish to become a martyr. Just stay where you are ; I am sure they will find you soon.


Mighty Quinn
said
0 0

Let's just hope the person or people replacing him aren't just as bad. You know: "Trading the devil we know, for the devil we don't."


obsserverman
said
0 0

A MARTYR FOR DICTATORS Martyrdom is associated with someone laying down their life for a religion or a noble cause. The Colonel can never qualify as a martyr after mercilessly gunning down his own people and treating the public treasury as a personal bank. His best bet would be downstairs with the thermostat turned up by a few hundred degrees more instead of a few thousand degrees.


B. Kelley, Ontario
said
0 0

Don't start celebrating right away unless you like paying $2 per litre for gasoline. All this unrest in the Middle East, even in those countries without oil, is already having an adverse effect and that's just the beginning. Political instability will be used by the speculators to drive crude oil prices up and make billions of additional dollars in the process. That will stall and probably reverse the fragile economic recovery we've been enjoying in Canada. If anyone thinks that democracy will be the new order in the Middle East they're living in fantasy land. Those people aren't ready to accept such a radical change and all they'll end up with is a new group of Despots replacing the old guard. How may times have we seen that happen? Is it really worth it?


Doug ^^^ BC
said
0 0

I think "Eric" is on to something. Now that people in the middle east have access to the news,they get to see how other people live,and they want that too. Good on them. Moammar probably will die in this conflict. But it's clear he has SOME supporters.More than likely paid for with money that belonged to the people of Libya.My concern is about how many innocent Libyans will die in fhis revolution. Also,good post "DanK".Your comment takes me back to pre WWII days,when royalty and governments were wooing Adolph Hitler.If they had listened to Winston Churchill,and the German people who opposed Hitler and the entire Nazi movement,,millions of people may not have died. Surely that ranks as one of the biggest political blunders in the history of mankind.Let's all hope nothing happens in the middle east that comes even close to that level of incompetence.


Dwight
said
0 0

& people complain about the governments we have in North America? How lucky we are to be living in the Canada, & the U.S.A.


John
said
0 0

Murderer and coward. Although I'm not a violent man, I hope his wish comes true sooner rather than later. I'd hate to see any more unarmed people shot in the streets.


Helga
said
0 0

If he wants to die a "martyr" (excuse me while I stifle a laugh) it can be arranged. Would he like it painful or painful? It's his choice.


J. C. Godon
said
0 0

He will die as a martyr ,so says he , he could never be one. He has the leadership and intellect of a Goat . The people of Libia need a leader not a common Goat.


Inga
said
0 0

Reagan was right - this chap is flaky, and that's saying it politely.


Howard in Brampton
said
0 0

So, Mr. Gadhafi vows to die a martyr on Libyan soil.Well I say, OK! And the sooner the better, since there seems to be nothing except more bloodshed, violence, and oppression for Libyan citizens under the thumb of someone who obviously has mental health issues that seem untreatable.


John Global
said
0 0

What is the lesson democratic governments can learn from this blood soaked tragedy? Dictators are encouraged by receiving large payoffs from foreign business for special concessions related to the oil industry in Libya. Large investments have been made particularly by some European countries. Canada too has investments in the Libyan oil fields. It would take a very strong government in Canada to starve the dictators at the before they became super powerful. Condemnation of the current brutality can appear to be self righteous.


Karene
said
0 0

Gadhafi you're 7/24ths/365 days of the year forever Halloween Party are over! No longer will you be aloud to sit on the golden throne and crack out caviar farts! Bye bye!


Milley
said
0 0

Never trust a man whose face looks fixed like a mask and never moves.


Davis
said
0 0

Oh Boo Hoo....I wanna keep my Ivory Tower, my expensive shiny yachts, my mon-mon-mon-ney !!!! (sobbing, kicking and stamping feet like a spoiled brat in a fit of crying rage) Why do all you poor Libyans have to ruin it for me!!??!!?? (crying maniacally and shouting like Hitler). Poor deposed king/dictator/whatever the hell he thinks he is.


Michael from the real world
said
0 0

If the Colonel [Captain, in reality] had the courage of his convictions, he would go to the central square in Tripoli and offer himself up for his swift "martyrdom". Where he is going there are no 72 eager virgins awaiting, ever.


Chris
said
0 0

Death would be to humane for this man. He should be made to suffer as he made his county suffer. Strip him of wealth and title and let him rot in one of his own prisons for the rest of his life.


Ella-Max
said
0 0

Die a martyr? LOL! Would he like to die in his Ivory Paved bathroom with the solid gold fixtures? Or perhaps in his diamond encrusted swimming pool with salt water imported from the shores of Tahiti? A "martyr"..my big fat bum! Somebody has been peeing on the leg of an entire country (world for that matter) and telling us..it's "raining"!


Mervin
said
0 0

He's not Kadaffy (Duck) That's Fred Armisan from SNL!!! Guaranteed first skit come Saturday night!


Red X
said
0 0

He will if he prices the Oil in Euros!


Linda In The Valley
said
0 0

Oh Joy! Oh Bliss! Another martyr go for it! Watching the video was like watching Hitler rants of yet another mad man.


Dean in Abby
said
0 0

Put your money where your mouth is big guy! Hope your wish comes true.


Steve T
said
0 0

Someone should give the blithering idiot his wish!


Gerald
said
0 0

This guy is completely losing it now . The big squeeze is on and I doubt that he will be there by the weekend or anywhere else for that matter.It's great how the bullies cry when they are taken down. I wonder who's next ?


R
said
0 0

Solution for Gadhafi - Off With His Head!!

(are you going to censur this statement as you did once before -and - it's a lot tamer than some comments which use unsavory language?)


James
said
0 0

"Gadhafi vows he will die before he leaves Libya"....that is what we are hoping for !! This man is evil personified.


Erica
said
0 0

Go ahead and die then! Just don't hold your breath for the title of 'martyr'. The martyrs are laying on the streets because you murdered them and won't let people go get their bodies. Your time has come devil. And make sure you take your sons with you.


rick
said
0 0

Hopefully his vow will come true. But when he's gone we'll decide whether or not he gets the status as a martyr....but as it stands the votes are not in his favor.


Eric
said
0 0

Is the Arab world starting to embrace Western Ideals and democracy? For so long the US and Canada were looked upon as evil. Now that the youth of that part of the world are being educated and a lot of them right here ideals seem to be changing. The internet as well is opening up their eyes. Times are changing, it will be interesting to see what comes out of all of this !


Whither Canada
said
0 0

The U.N. human rights chief called Tuesday for an international investigation into the violent repression of protests against Muammar Gaddafi's 41-year rule, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay said in a statement. Fenniche said that use of force on protesters and the civilian population could constitute a crime against humanity, but "it is up to tribunals to determine so." Gee, I wonder how long it will take to set up this tribunal? And what is the cost? Now do you see what a joke the U.N. is? Rawanda, Sudan, Serbia - the hits just keep coming!


Richard Earl
said
0 0

MowEmDown Gadhafi's actions clearly label him as a murdering criminal by any standard. I sure hope he lives long enough to be dealt with in an international court of law and imprisioned for the rest of his life in a mental institution where he belongs. And I hope that each and every military commander who ordered/allowed his troops to fire on unarmed civilians is arrested and tried for their crimes as well.


Jason Daniel Baker, Toronto
said
0 0

The cold and diabolical logic of it is that Gaddafi is seeing protests across the middle east result in the toppling of governments and concluding that because the army didn't attack the protesters full on in those instances that he has to in Libya to stay in power.What we get from hearing about this is a full understanding of Gaddafi's complete lack of regard for any human life aside from his own. I sincerely hope he is run out of Libya by his people.


Rick from North Alton
said
0 0

I cannot understand why htese people think they have to rule for life,he does not care abnout his owqn people,he only cares about staying in power at any cost,eveern if it means killing thousands of his own people.The people should never give up,never and when they topple him they should take him and his son and behead them for crimes against humanity,this creap thInks he is God but he is really a demon in disguise,only a real evel person would give a order to KILL HIS OWN PEOPLE !!!!


DanK
said
0 0

Only a few months ago we had Western "Leaders" like Tony Blair (UK) who were shaking hands and making photo-ops with Gaddafi. Too bad we chose to ignore a murderous tyrants recent behavior to boost our oil company revenues and for a small pay-off to the Lockerbie Bombing victims families. Then we released the only convicted bomber to help grease the wheels of commerce.Can you now see why Osama Bin Laden wants the West out of the Mid-East. We will do almost anything for a little money. Really sad.


P Jackson
said
0 0

Did that video clip showing Gaddafi have sound? Looks to me he is inside an large military airplane not outside in the rain as reported. That car is not wet.


Jaid in Toronto
said
0 0

Gadhafi will end leaving in two possible ways, which are by international intervention or by his own hand. International intervention may be the best choice as it saves lives but it may also cost a lot of lives. By his own hand, the people of that country continue to be resilient until well, Gadhafi chooses to kill them all off or they all flee the country.With no more people working for Gadhafi except his loyalists, he won't have any more economy. Most likely any attempt to ask for funds from any other country except possibly those in the Middle-East will be a simple result of no.With that said, either this problem gets fixed internationally or you let a problem that starts in its own country end in its own country.


Mohamed Ahmed Ont.
said
0 0

Paul Martin is going to miss Gadhafi. Paul as Liberal Prime Minister embarassed all of Canada and made him his first overseas visit Gadhafi and gave him big hug. Stephen Harper on the other hand told Gadhafi he is not welcome in Canada on our soil. Prime Minister Harper had the class not to coddle this terroristic dictator I am starting to think Harper deserves a majority.


Sherry
said
0 0

Another reason why this pathetic waste of a human body should be jailed or executed - the Military is not firing on the people on their own - this animal has proven before he cares not a thing about the people - only his own power. Get him out of there! Hopefully those in the Military who have refused to harm their people will be in charge with the right Opposition in the future.


Nancy Toronto
said
0 0

Ghadfi has to go. He does not have one friend in the world.


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