Libyan
court sentences Gaddafi son Saif, eight other ex-officials to death
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[July 28, 2015]
TRIPOLI (Reuters) - A Libyan court
passed a death sentence in absentia on Muammar Gaddafi's most prominent
son, Saif al-Islam, on Tuesday for war crimes and acts to crush peaceful
protests during the country's 2011 revolution that ended his father's
rule.
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The court also sentenced to death by firing squad eight other
former Gaddafi regime officials including his former intelligence
chief Abdullah al-Senussi and ex-prime minister Baghdadi
al-Mahmoudi, on the same charges, said Sadiq al-Sur, chief
investigator at the Tripoli state prosecutor's office.
Eight other ex-officials received life sentences and seven were
given jail terms of 12 years each, he told a news conference carried
by al-Nabaa television. Four were acquitted. All but Saif al-Islam
are in judicial custody.
The verdict on al-Islam was passed in absentia in Tripoli since he
has been held for four years by a former rebel group in the Zintan
region beyond central government control.
The trial began in April 2014 before fighting between rival factions
in Tripoli ripped Libya apart in a power struggle which has produced
two governments competing for central authority.
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The sentences can be appealed and must be confirmed by Libya's
highest court. The International Criminal Court and rights groups
say they worry about the fairness and competence of Libya's judicial
system, although it won the right in 2013 to try Senussi at home
instead of at the ICC in The Hague.
(Reporting by Omar Fahmy, Ahmed Elumami and Ulf Laessing; Writing by
Ulf Laessing; Editing by Mark Heinrich)
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