Gadhafi says he quit compound in ‘tactical withdrawal’
TRIPOLI, Libya – Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said Wednesday he had abandoned his Tripoli compound, seized earlier by rebel fighters, in a “tactical withdrawal.”
“Bab al-Azizya was nothing but a heap of rubble after it was the target of 64 NATO missiles and we withdrew from it for tactical reasons,” he said in a speech carried by the website of a television station headed by his son Seif al-Islam.
The speech also quoted by the pro-Gadhafi Al-Oruba channel came after rebel fighters stormed the sprawling compound but found no trace of him or any of his family.
It gave no indication of where he had gone.
At the same time Gadhafi spokesman Mussa Ibrahim told the Syrian-based Arrai channel that more than 6,500 “volunteers” had arrived in Tripoli to fight for the regime and called for more.
“The volunteers can come to Libya and we will give them weapons, ammunition and training,” he said.
Article continues after this advertisementIbrahim said Gadhafi’s forces had captured several rebel leaders and warned that if NATO raids continued “we will turn Libya into a brazier and we can protect civilians from the crusader gangs and alliances.”