TRIPOLI: Ousted Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi's wife and other relatives fled to Algeria on Monday, the Algerian foreign ministry said.
The Algerian government said Gaddafi's wife, daughter, two of his sons and their children entered the neighbouring country on Monday. It did not say whether Gaddafi himself was with the family.
It said the
UN secretarygeneral and
Security Council and the head of Libyan rebel National Transition Council were informed. The report came as battles raged on two sides of Sirte, the southern city that is the headquarters of Gaddafi's tribe and his regime's last major bastion. The rebels were consolidating control of Tripoli, the capital.
Despite effectively ending his rule, the rebels have yet to find Gaddafi or his family members - something that has cast a pall of lingering uncertainty over the opposition's victory. The Egyptian news agency MENA, quoting unidentified rebel fighters, had reported from
Tripoli over the weekend that six armored Mercedes sedans, possibly carrying Gaddafi's sons or other top regime figures, had crossed the border at the southwestern Libyan town of Ghadamis into Algeria. Algeria's foreign ministry had denied that report. Ahmed Jibril, an aide to rebel National Transitional Council head Mustafa Abdul-Jalil, said if the report of Gaddafi relatives in Algeria is true, "we will demand that Algerian authorities hand them over to
Libya". Ahmed Bani, military spokesman of the council, said he was not surprised to hear Algeria had welcomed Gaddafi relatives 100km from Tripoli.
Libya's defected former PM Abessalam Jalloud said Gaddafi could be hiding south of Tripoli. "There are two possibilities: either he is hiding south of Tripoli or he left some time ago," he said.