Volunteers loyal to Libya's Moammar Gadhafi chant slogans after Gadhafi's...

Volunteers loyal to Libya's Moammar Gadhafi chant slogans after Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam spoke to them in Tripoli, Libya. (Aug. 23, 2011) Credit: AP

Forces loyal to the fugitive Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi struck back against the rebel fighters who had swept euphorically into the capital the night before, forcing them to retreat from several strategic locations and tempering hopes that the battle for Tripoli was all but over.

The dramatic appearance last night of Gadhafi's son Seif al-Islam at the Rixos hotel, where the Tripoli-based press corps remains trapped, contradicted the rebels' assertion the day before that they had captured him and cast into doubt their claim of controlling 80 percent of the capital.

Video footage recorded by the Reuters news agency showed Seif al-Islam being greeted by supporters.

"To hell with the ICC," he said, in reference to the International Criminal Court, which has issued a warrant for his arrest. "We assure the people that things are fine in Libya."

The BBC and CNN quoted him as telling reporters that government forces had lured the rebels into a trap and "broken the back" of the opposition army and that pro-Gadhafi forces are back in control of the city.

The confusion made the assertion impossible to confirm, but with gunfire and explosions echoing through the streets and Gadhafi's whereabouts still unknown, it was clear that the capital was far from secure.

President Barack Obama and other world leaders declared an end to Gadhafi's nearly 42-year-long rule and hailed the courage of the Libyan people. The leaders said they were looking forward to cooperating with a new Libyan government, which presumably would be led by the opposition's Transitional National Council, based in the eastern city of Benghazi.

Obama cautioned that "the situation is still very fluid." "There remains a degree of uncertainty, and there are still regime elements who pose a threat," he said, speaking from Martha's Vineyard, Mass., where he is vacationing. But, addressing his remarks to the Libyan people, he said: "The Libya that you deserve is within your reach." How close was in question, however, as the uncertainty on Tripoli's streets appeared only to mount as the day wore on.

With Gadhafi himself on the run, it was clear that the epic and often-eccentric rule of the man who once proclaimed himself "king of Africa" had effectively come to a close.

Yet the mystery surrounding his whereabouts and the indications that his loyalists were still capable of mounting resistance in the capital raised echoes of Baghdad in April 2003, when Saddam Hussein slipped away from advancing U.S. troops and later served as a lightning rod for disgruntled regime loyalists, who formed the core of an insurgency that persists to this day.

Rebels in Tripoli said they were confident that Gadhafi was still in the capital, and they erected checkpoints around the city to ensure he did not slip away. "We are winning. It is safe," said rebel fighter Abdel Azouz, as the sound of explosions and gunfire echoed down the telephone line. "There's just a few dirty rats here and there who don't want to give up."

Azouz acknowledged, however, that Gadhafi loyalists were in firm control of the fortified Bab al-Aziziya compound on the southern edge of Tripoli, where Gadhafi purportedly lived.

NATO has targeted the compound so frequently that few Libyans believe he has been staying there recently, but the rebels suspect he may be hiding in an area house.

The compound is about a mile from the Rixos hotel, where journalists are effectively being held hostage by pro-Gadhafi gunmen in the lobby who are refusing to let them leave. CNN correspondent Matthew Chance said that the hotel was without electricity and that journalists had gathered for safety in an inside room. "This could go badly wrong," he told the network. "It's becoming a lot more ugly here."It is also possible that Gadhafi took refuge perhaps weeks ago in the southern city of Sabha or the central coastal town of Sirte, his home town and most staunchly loyal stronghold. He has not been seen in public since June, though he has delivered numerous audio statements, most recently as the rebels swept into Tripoli late Sunday.

With the focus now on the capital, it was unclear when or whether the rebels would be able to dislodge Gadhafi's supporters from Sirte, a heavily guarded garrison town that lies on the coastal highway between the de facto rebel capital of Benghazi and Tripoli, effectively isolating the rebel government from the country's real capital.

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