Interpol issues red alert for hunted Gaddafi

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Police organization puts out "red notices" for former Libyan leader, his son and spy chief, as new convoy reaches Niger.

Interpol has issued a red notice - its highest arrest alert - for Muammar Gaddafi as the hunt for the fugitive former Libyan leader intensifies.
The France-based international police organisation said it had issued the notice in collaboration with Luis Moreno-Ocampo, the chief prosecutor of the International Criminal Court (ICC) where Gaddafi is wanted to face charges of crimes against humanity.


Notices were also issued for Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, and Abdullah Senussi, his former director of military intelligence, who have also been indicted by the ICC.


"The Red Notices have been circulated to all of Interpol's 188 members and include essential identifying and judicial information," the organisation said.

Interpol's move followed a request for the red notice from Moreno-Ocampo.
"Prosecutor Moreno-Ocampo's request for Interpol red notices will significantly restrict the ability of all three men to cross international borders and is a powerful tool to help in their location and arrest," Ronald K Noble, Interpol's secretary-general, said in a statement published on the site.


Gaddafi officials enter Niger



Meanwhile, a group of 14 Gaddafi officials, including General Ali Kana, a Tuareg who was one of Gaddafi's close aides, have crossed into Niger's northern city of Agadez, according to security sources quoted by Reuters.
Two sources said the group included four top officials, amongst them two generals. The identity of the other general has not been confirmed.


"The group arrived in four four-wheel-drive vehicles on Thursday afternoon," one of the sources said, adding that they were accompanied by Nigerien security forces.
Niger's government has not commented on the reports.
The arrival of the group follows that of Mansour Dhao, the head of Gaddafi's security brigades, who crossed into Niger in a convoy on Monday.
Niger has said it had allowed the Libyans into its territory on humanitarian grounds, but has come under pressure from the international community to hand over former Gaddafi officials suspected of human rights abuses.


'Million march' in Tripoli



Amid the massing of Libyan fighters around the last remaining strongholds of Gaddafi, upto a million people are holding march in the capital, Tripoli.
Gaddafi's loyalists in the town of Bani Walid and further east in the toppled leader's hometown of Sirte have been given until Saturday to surrender.
Five National Transitional Council (NTC) fighters were killed on Thursday as they tried to move in the few small towns where Gaddafi supporters are hold up.


Fighters inched forward to about 5km outside Bani Walid late on Thursday, with NATO planes monitoring the advance from the sky, Reuters reported.
Residents fleeing Bani Walid, a desert town 150km south of Tripoli, said Gaddafi loyalists were intimidating people and supplies were low.
But Mahmoud Jibril, the man who is now effectively Libya's prime minister, told reporters on Thursday that the war for Libya was not yet over.

"The greater challenge is still there. The first challenge is to achieve a sort of victory over ourselves. The second challenge is to be able to be tolerant and to forgive and to go forward towards the future,
 
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