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Gadhafi's aides repeatedly urged him to step aside and leave the country, but he refused, saying he wanted to die in the land of his ancestors, according to Dao. "I feel sorry for him because he underestimated the situation," Dao said. "He could have left and gotten out of the country and lived a happy life." Dao had worked for Gadhafi since 1980, including as chief of his personal security in the 1990s. Later, Dao assumed command of the so-called Peoples' Guards, whose main aim was to go after Gadhafi's opponents. In Sirte, Gadhafi and his entourage switched hideouts about every four days, as the city was pounded by NATO airstrikes and revolutionary forces advanced. The group stayed within the confines of the so-called No. 2 neighborhood, seeking shelter in homes residents had abandoned as they fled the fighting. "We were scared of the airstrikes and shelling," Dao said, adding that he did not believe Gadhafi was afraid. He said food was scarce in Sirte in the final days. Dao has previously said that audio messages Gadhafi sent from hiding were transmitted by Thuraya satellite phone. In Sirte, loyalist fighters were led by Muatassim, who initially commanded about 350 men, Dao said. Many fled and toward the end, the fighting force diminished to about 150, said Dao, dressed in navy blue pajamas. Gadhafi, who once ruled a country of 6 million with an iron fist, railed against the loss of power. "He was stressed, he was really angry, he was mad sometimes," Dao said. "Mostly, he was just sad and angry." "He believed the Libyan people still loved him, even after we told him that Tripoli had been occupied."
[Associated
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