"Landep News"
The same thing was reiterated by the Libyan Prime Minister Al-Baghdadi Ali Al-Mahmoudi, who said in an interview for Fox News that the country’s leader had no intention to step down.
He added that the population of Libya has decided this clearly, and that Qaddafi’s destiny is not negotiable.
French minister of foreign affairs, Alain Juppe, had said last week that there were negotiations with the Libyan leadership, and that Qaddafi was promised to be let to live in the country after the regime was changed.
The same proposition had been made by the African Union, who had told the National Transitional Council in Benghazi that a solution could be found that would allow Qaddafi to continue to live in the country. At the time, the TNC in Benghazi rejected the proposition made by the African continental body.
It is considered that even though such an agreement existed, it would practically be impossible for the leader to continue to live in the country, where the people hate him, after many arbitrary executions were carried out at his command.
The opposition wants Qaddafi to go, whereas the supporters of the regime want him to stay, which makes the civil war in this country revolve around one single person: Muammar al Qaddafi, whom many hate, and others love.
The opposition considers that the leader must go, because, unless he does so, he will not release power. As long as Qaddafi has the military strings and the possibility to influence decision-making, the leaders of the opposition think, he will not step down.
Since the beginning of the bombing of the capital city, Tripoli, by NATO, no one has seen Qaddafi, prompting some people to wonder where he was.
In the meantime, the battle continues in the field with the rebels attempting to enter the capital city of the country.
Two weeks ago, a Contact Group on Libya was convened in Istanbul, during the visit of the U.S. State Secretary Hillary Clinton in the region, and the decision was made to recognize the National Transitional Council as the sole authority in Libya.
The regime led by Qaddafi was thus declared illegitimate. An international arrest warrant had been previously issued in the name of Qaddafi, which is per se another reason why he would never agree to go into exile.
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