Amid the popular Libyan uprising against Col Muammar Gaddafi, residents of towns and cities in the areas of eastern Libya controlled by rebels have formed an interim administration.
The Interim Transitional National Council aims to provide political and military leadership, organise basic services and represent Libyans abroad.
Its leaders say the council is not a government, but will "steer" Libya into what they hope will be a post-Gaddafi era and then "guide the country to free elections and the establishment of a constitution for Libya".
According to its website, the body currently has 31 members representing the various regions and cities of Libya. Some have been named, while those representing Ajdabiya, Kufra, Ghat, Nalut, Misrata, Zintan and Zawiya will remain anonymous.
Mustafa Mohammed Abdul Jalil - Chairman
Mr Abdul Jalil quit as Libya's justice minister on 21 February in protest at "the excessive use of violence against unarmed protesters" by the government.
He was born in the eastern city of Bayda in 1952 and studied Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of Libya.
After graduating, Mr Abdul Jalil worked as a lawyer in the public prosecutor's office in Bayda before becoming a judge in 1978. In 2002, he was appointed president of the Court of Appeal. His final post before being named justice minister in 2007 was president of the court in Bayda.
On 9 March, Libyan state television reported that Col Gaddafi's government had offered a $400,000 (£250,000) bounty for his capture.
Abdul Hafez Ghoga - Vice-chairman, spokesman
Mr Ghoga is a Benghazi-based human rights lawyer and community organiser.
The former president of the Libyan Bar was arrested on 19 February, shortly after the anti-government protests began, but was released a few days later.
He later rose to prominence after declaring himself the spokesman of an interim council, rivalling the one created by Mustafa Abdel Jalil.
Mr Ghoga was subsequently named vice-chairman and spokesman of the Interim Transitional National Council at the beginning of March.
Col Gaddafi's son, Saif al-Islam, has portrayed Mr Ghoga as a turncoat. He told al-Sharq al-Awsat newspaper: "Two weeks ago, he was sitting in Col Gaddafi's tent cheering and applauding, and he even appeared on al-Jazeera defending Libya and the regime. However, now he is talking about toppling the regime?"
Omar al-Hariri - military affairs
Mr Hariri is one of the officers who took part in the military coup that brought Col Gaddafi to power in 1969. He was later jailed after they fell out.
“Start Quote
End Quote Omar al-HaririRight now I am telling them freedom is costly, and nothing is more precious than Libyans' blood”
Col Lamine Abdul Wahhab, a member of the rebel military council for the Benghazi area, said he believed the appointment of Mr Hariri would improve the rebel armed forces' co-ordination. "He is a well-known personality and very popular as he tried to overthrow Gaddafi," he told the Reuters news agency.
In an interview with the Globe and Mail newspaper on 2 March, Mr Hariri, 67, recounted how he had taught Col Gaddafi to drive a car when they were both young army officers. The two men later conspired to topple King Idris in 1969.
Mr Hariri said he regretted that the officers did not then have a clear plan for the new Libya and that he did not want to "make the same mistakes".
"This time, the people will be our safeguards," he said. "They will elect a new president and he will serve for a limited time. He could be removed if he does not serve the people. And, of course, we will need a parliament, and a multi-party system."
In 1975, while serving as secretary general of the revolutionary cabinet, Mr Hariri began to organise a plot to overthrow Col Gaddafi with his fellow officers.
The plot was discovered and about 300 men were arrested, he said. Four died under interrogation and 21 were sentenced to death, including Mr Hariri.
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He spent the next 15 years in prison awaiting execution, four and a half of them in solitary confinement.
Then in 1990, Col Gaddafi unexpectedly commuted Mr Hariri's death sentence and he was placed under house arrest in the eastern city of Tobruk. The security forces watched him closely until the uprising began.
Mr Hariri, who is feted as a hero by the rebel fighters when he appears in public, said the Interim Transitional National Council's role was to "counsel" the young people who initiated the uprising.
"Right now I am telling them freedom is costly, and nothing is more precious than Libyans' blood," he explained.
Mr Hariri wants the international community to create a no-fly zone over Libya and possibly even air strikes on military targets. He believes the regime will eventually collapse, but that Col Gaddafi will not go quietly.
Mahmoud Jibril - foreign affairs
Before the uprising, Mr Jibril was involved in a project called "Libyan Vision" with other intellectuals, which sought to establish a democratic state. He is also head of the rebel council's crisis committee, which aims to streamline decision making.
Born in 1952, Mr Jibril has both a master's degree in political science and a PhD in strategic planning and decision-making from the University of Pittsburgh in Pennsylvania.
After completing his doctorate in 1984, he taught strategic planning and decision-making at the university for several years. He also wrote several books and ran leadership training programmes in several Arab states.
He later became the head of the Libyan National Planning Council. Then in 2009, he was appointed chairman of the National Economic Development Board (NEDB), reporting directly to the prime minister.
A leaked US diplomatic cable from November 2009 written by the US ambassador to Libya, Gene Cretz, described Mr Jibril as "a serious interlocutor who 'gets' the US perspective".
"He is also not shy about sharing his views of US foreign policy, for example, opining that the US spoiled a golden opportunity to capitalise on its 'soft power' (McDonald's, etc) after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1989 by putting 'boots on the ground' in the Middle East," Mr Cretz wrote.
An earlier US diplomatic cable described Mr Jibril as "reform-minded".
Ali Issawi - foreign affairs
Mr Issawi resigned as Libyan ambassador to India on 21 February in protest at the government's "use of violence against its citizens" and deployment of "foreign mercenaries against Libyans."
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Born in Benghazi in 1966, Mr Issawi has a PhD in privatisation from the Academy of Economic Studies in Bucharest, Romania. In 2005, he became director general of the Ownership Expansion Programme, a Libyan government fund encouraging privatisation, and founded the Centre for Export Development in 2006.
The next year he became Libya's minister of economy, trade and investment. He was the youngest person to have occupied the post.
Following a cabinet reshuffle in March 2009, Mr Issawi was left without a post. A leaked US diplomatic cable said the French embassy in Tripoli believed the move was "related to accusations of corruption".
However, the cable also noted: "Issawi twice attempted to resign last year over disagreements with [Prime Minister al-Baghdadi Ali] al-Mahmoudi but was convinced to stay." Sources also said Mr Essawi was also a member of a "shadow" committee set up in 2008 by Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, which had been "charged with hammering out specifics" of a government reform programme, the cable added.
Ahmed al-Zubair Ahmed al-Sanusi - political prisoners
The dissident was Libya's longest-serving "prisoner of conscience".
He was accused of involvement in an attempted coup against Col Gaddafi in 1970 and spent 31 years in prison, many of them in solitary confinement. He was released in August 2001, on the occasion of the 32nd anniversary the revolution.
Fathi Mohammed Baja - Benghazi
Mr Baja is a political science professor at the University of Benghazi. He is a member of Benghazi's city council and the rebel 17 February Revolution Coalition.
“Start Quote
End Quote Fathi Mohammed BajaThis revolution is going towards the creation of modern Libya, freedom and democracy”
The 58-year-old told Time magazine on 22 February: "We thought Gaddafi's revolution was for freedom and human rights. But the four decades since then has been total chaos. It is not even a state. It is a brutal dictatorship."
He said he was certain that the next generation in Libya would see true democracy. "Gaddafi has stolen people's money, Libya's wealth," he added.
Mr Baja helped draft a manifesto for the revolution, which had two major principles: national unity and democracy.
"It is for the unity of all Libya - that is the [first] thing. The second is that this revolution is going towards the creation of modern Libya, freedom and democracy based on a pluralistic society, based on human rights, participation of all parts of Libya in creating their government and their institutions," he explained.
Fathi Tirbil Salwa - young people
Mr Tirbil played a significant part in sparking the uprising.
The young lawyer and activist helped organise a peaceful demonstration in Benghazi on 15 February by the families of some of the 1,200 inmates of the notorious Abu Salim prison who were massacred by Libyan security forces in 1996 in retaliation for a revolt in the eastern city.
The protesters were calling for human rights, but the local Revolutionary Committee ordered that Mr Tirbil be arrested.
When local people gathered outside the police station where Mr Tirbil was being held to demand his release, officers reportedly opened fire on them.
Over the next few days, the anti-government protests in Benghazi grew more widespread and spread to several other eastern cities, before eventually reaching Tripoli.
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