going on for so long now. nearly half a year and, you know, i think there s a great momentum for there to be no more bloodshed. we don t know where qaddafi is but we know where you are, you re there in tripoli, libya, with the very latest. thank you very much. strange situation for them because with the people around there that are still loyal to qaddafi, they re kind of trying to imply a different a warped perception of reality to the journalists that are staying at that hotel. all righty. here we go with the rest of the headlines. 76-year-old boy scout troop leader is stabbed to death. this man you re looking at right now, a 22-year-old is behind bars and accused of standing arthur anderson while he led two boy scouts on a trail. witnesses say he came out of nowhere and he attacked anderson. the suspect then led police on a high speed chase before being caught. he is also accused of hitting his mom and killing one of her dogs before attacking the scout leader. meanwhile, two
know where he s at. who is calling the shots? that s a good question. the minders have all fled, all the government people, the ones that are listening into our conversations and monitoring our e-mails they took off last night when it looked like the tide was turning against them. we have these young men running around with guns, where is qaddafi? it s million dollar question. david cameron speaking outside earlier on saying where ever he is, he s on the run, basically and he must surrender. the fighting has to stop and has to fight unconditionally, he cannot keep asking his people to fight on, this hopeless cause it would seem. but he last night in another audio message said to the tribes in those areas unaffected by fighting yet to come into tripoli and basically fight the rebels that seem to control much of the city. being these the forces loyal to qaddafi have been giving up and for the most part, there s been no reports of them being tortured or in prison.
rebel convoy carrying members of the media was hit by qaddafi troops after libyan rebels have control of 95% of the capital. the fox news producer is in tripoli and joins us on the phone. what can you tell us? yeah, juliet, we just got the report some time ago from colleagues that were on that convoy. they were not far from the square, the siege that was used amongst rebels. that s ground zero for libya, for tripoli, the capital here and we re told that they basically came around the corner and there was a government force that opened up on the convoy and shot the first two cars to pieces. it s indicative of the fact that there s major pockets outside 15% to 20% of the city that haven t come under full control and there s fights going on as we speak. wow. you know, for a while, tadek, i could hear your frustration of being stuck in that room they say for your own protection. when you hear a story like that,
fact that there s too many snipers in this area. i ll caution the figure of 95% of the army, 20% in pro government and pro qaddafi hands still including that compound you spoke of which is no more than, you know, a kilometer, half a kilometer behind the hotel where, you know, there s still some holdouts putting up stiff resistance there so right now, we re caught between the lines but we re hoping, you know, that some short time, we can actually get out and start looking and speaking to the people and find out what s going on here. how did this go from a stalemate with no end in sight to the collapse of tripoli with very little bloodshed? what happened in the interim? did you sense they were this vulnerable? brian, right up to the bitter end. even late yesterday, the government spokesman was saying to us, we re willing to negotiate. we re going to negotiate from a position of strength. we have 65,000 professional soldiers around the city and
the logic would tell you there s such fierce fighting around the qaddafi compound that those there are more than likely protecting him rather than themselves, don t you think? that s a very good question. i mean, basically, the government spokesperson said there are people in libya, in tripoli, who are so ingrained in the qaddafi camp that really, there is no escape for them. it s death or nothing because, you know, a life without qaddafi is no life at all. they re going to fight until the bitter end and there s a suggestion certainly around the compound, you know, what are they fighting for? who are they protecting? are they fighting for time? are they fighting just to sort of, you know, for their own cause, for whatever benefit they think they can get from it but certainly, we know that he was in deep hiding and he was traveling between hospitals so they wouldn t be bombed. you know, there s no knowing where he is right now but certainly all the world leaders united and calling for