Four International Criminal Court staff held in Libya
NETHERLANDS: Four members of the International Criminal Court have
been arrested and are being held in Libya, the tribunal said Saturday,
calling on the authorities there to free them.
The ICC team had been held since Thursday, having travelled to Libya
to meet Seif al-Islam, the detained son of slain leader Moamer Kadhafi,
the statement said.
The visit was by ICC lawyers appointed to handle Seif’s defence.
“We are very concerned about the safety of our staff in the absence
of any contact with them,” ICC president Judge Sang-Hyun Song said in
the statement.
“These four international civil servants have immunity when on an
official ICC mission,” said Judge Song in the ICC statement.
“I call on the Libyan authorities to immediately take all necessary
measures to ensure their safety and security and to liberate them.” The
ICC court is seeking to try Seif and Kadhafi’s former intelligence chief
for crimes against humanity. But the new regime in Libya wants to put
Seif on trial in a local court.
Earlier Saturday, sources in Libya reported that the authorities
there had arrested one of Seif’s defence lawyers, accusing her of having
tried to pass “dangerous” documents to him. The lawyer, Australian
Melinda Taylor, works with Xavier-Jean Keita, the defence attorney
appointed by the ICC.
Ahmed al-Jehani, Libya’s representative to the ICC said Taylor was
“under house arrest in Zintan, not in prison,” and was being questioned.
Also arrested was an unidentified woman said to be acting as Taylor’s
interpreter.
AFP |