<i>Where is Gaddafi?</i>
Muammar Gaddafi, who for decades enjoyed strutting before the public in his finery, has disappeared from the stage as rebels take over his former stronghold Tripoli.
The rebels want to get their hands on him and so does the International Criminal Court. But they must find him first.
Gaddafi has not been seen in public since mid-June. His foes speculate he may not be in the Libyan capital or even in the country. As rebel fortunes have risen, his long televised speeches at boisterous public meetings have given way to scratchy telephone appeals from unknown hideouts.
Over his 41-year-rule, Col Gaddafi created a personality cult, with his image festooned in banners and posters all over Libya and his philosophy spelled out in a “Green Book”. He presented himself as a father of the nation and, on the international stage, a warrior against colonialism and a campaigner first for pan-Arab and then pan-African interests.
He undoubtedly enjoyed a measure of popular support, so catching him and demonstrating to the people that his reign is well and truly over will be crucial for the next government.
French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, whose government has been in the forefront of the international effort to oust Gaddafi, said yesterday that Paris did not know where he was. British Prime Minister David Cameron said London had no confirmation of his whereabouts either.
If he has fled Tripoli, one possible bolt-hole would be Sirte, his home region, where he could still find some support and sympathy.
At one point early in the uprising, Britain said he was thought to be on his way to Venezuela and the welcoming arms of his friend Hugo Chavez.
That proved to be false, but in the past week rumours that a Venezuelan plane was at a Libyan airport fuelled renewed speculation that he might head for that exit door.
If he is still in Tripoli, it is likely to be a bunker in a military compound.
Gaddafi was last seen in public on June 12, meeting the president of the International Chess Federation, Russian Kirsan Ilyumzhinov, who said then that the leader told him he had no intention of leaving the country.
In the first few months of the uprising, the flamboyant 69-year-old made several spontaneous and often bizarre public appearances in Tripoli to rally support and spout defiance.
Recently though Gaddafi's bluster has been limited to audio recordings, often scratchy and hard to decipher. It was not clear where they were made but in a Sunday night broadcast, Gaddafi said he was still in Tripoli and would be "with you until the end."
NO EXIT TO SOUTH AFRICA
Whatever his hiding place, Gaddafi must be contemplating his fate and considering those of other toppled strongmen.
Egypt's Hosni Mubarak is now on trial for ordering the killing of protestors in the popular revolt which ended his rule in February. Tunisia's Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, the first leader to fall in the Arab Spring, is in exile in Saudi Arabia but facing trial in absentia.
Still, an internationally supervised trial might be the best option for Gaddafi.
Over the years dictators have found refuge in Panama (the Shah of Iran), Hawaii (the Philippines' Ferdinand Marcos), Saudi Arabia (Uganda's Idi Amin) and France (various). But there appears to be few volunteers to host Gaddafi.
South Africa, which led a failed African mediation effort, said on Monday it was not aiding Gaddafi's exit from Libya and knows that he will not seek asylum there.
Foreign Minister Maite Nkoana-Mashabane dismissed speculation that South Africa had sent aircraft to Libya.
"The South African government would like to refute and dispel the rumours that it has sent planes to Libya to fly individuals to some undisclosed locations or South Africa," she said.
Italian Foreign Minister Franco Frattini said that time had run out for negotiations over a possible exile for Gaddafi that he must face trial at the International Criminal Court in The Hague.
"It is still important to find Gaddafi, to put him on trial, which is what you saw with Saddam Hussein in Iraq, and in that way, it is a potentially very dangerous situation," said Swedish Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt.
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