Qaddafi's wife Safia and his daughter Aisha came to Tunisia
with a Libyan delegation, the source said.
The source refused to elaborate and the report could not be
independently confirmed.
Meanwhile, the men who are fighting to oust Qaddafi have a
new goal — they want to represent the oil-producing country at the next OPEC
meeting.
The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, made up
of 12 nations including Libya, is scheduled to meet on June 8 in Vienna.
Jalal Gallal, a spokesman for the National Transitional
Council, told reporters Wednesday that the group has sent a request to OPEC to
allow it to represent Libya at the oil bloc's next meeting. He did not want to
name the official the opposition hopes to send until it had a response from
OPEC. Gallal said he did not know when the request was sent.
OPEC meetings generally were attended by Qaddafi's oil
minister. However the minister, Shokri Ghanem, was reported to have defected
and fled the country earlier this week. Ghanem also was head of Libya's
National Oil Co.
The opposition has declined to comment on Ghanem's flight
until he announces whether he backs their cause.
Libya, which once produced about 1.6 million barrels per day
of crude, is now pumping just a trickle of that volume. In April, Qatar helped
the opposition complete the sale of 1 million barrels of crude that netted
roughly $129 million for the anti-Qaddafi forces.
The emir of Qatar, a supporter of NATO action against the
Qaddafi regime, visited neighboring Algeria on Wednesday for negotiations with
President Abdelaziz Bouteflika.
Unlike Qatar, Algeria thinks that the Libyans should resolve
the conflict by peaceful negotiation and believes a solution is possible
without Qaddafi’s departure.
The emir’s last visit to Algeria took place in December
2010.
The two countries have enjoyed good business relations, with
Qatari groups involved in Algeria’s gas and mobile telephone industries.
Qaddafi's wife and daughter in Tunisia
Publication Date:
Thu, 2011-05-19 02:16
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