Libya tries Kadhafi son Seif on security charges
LIBYA: Slain leader Moamer Kadhafi's son Seif al-Islam, wanted by the
ICC for crimes against humanity, appeared for the first time in a Libyan
court on Thursday on charges of "undermining state security," a judicial
official said.
He was charged after a controversial June visit to Libya by an
International Criminal Court team to help prepare his defence against
the charges of crimes against humanity in the conflict that overthrew
his father.
Thursday's hearing was held behind closed doors in Zintan, a hilltop
town southwest of Tripoli, where Seif has been in custody since his
arrest in November 2011 in the wake of the uprising that ended Kadhafi's
40-year rule.
It was closed to the media except to state broadcaster Al-Watania
television, which broadcast footage of the hearing on its mid-afternoon
news bulletin.
Seif, 39, with a salt and pepper beard, looked well as he stood
behind a metal grille in the courtroom. There was no soundtrack on the
broadcast.
"The first hearing in the trial of Seif al-Islam Kadhafi on charges
of undermining state security was held on Thursday," said deputy
prosecutor general Taha Baraa in Tripoli.
The charges were levelled against Seif after four ICC envoys went to
Zintan in June and were detained for nearly a month, triggering a
diplomatic row with The Hague-based court. They were finally allowed to
return home in July.
The four included Australian lawyer Melinda Taylor who was accused of
carrying a pen camera and attempting to give Seif a coded letter from
his former right-hand man Mohammed Ismail, who is wanted by Libyan
authorities.
AFP
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