Saif Qaddafi has today been sentenced to death by a court in Libya over war crimes linked to the 2011 uprising.
The
only surviving son of the former dictator Muammar Qaddafi faces
execution by firing squad having been accused of suppressing protests
during the revolution.
Saif al-Islam, along with eight others, will be given the right to appeal, according to the BBC.
He was not present in court as he is still being held by a former rebel group that took him captive in 2011 during the uprising.
The
court also sentenced Muammar Qaddafi's former spy chief, Abdullah
al-Senussi, and his former prime minister, Baghdadi al-Mahmoudi to
death.
Libya has slid into chaos since the overthrow and killing of Qaddafi. Conditions deteriorated still further last year. The country is now split between two warring administrations:
the older Islamist-dominated and Tripoli-based General National
Congress (GNC), and the House of Representatives (HOR), which gained
international recognition after elections in 2014.
VICE News filmmaker Medyan Dairieh was in Libya in 2011 to witness the revolution. In 2014, he returned to follow members of the 17th February battalion,
a rebel group fighting against the forces of former Qaddafi commander
Khalifa Haftar. Dairieh witnessed first-hand how life after the Libyan
revolution has devolved into lawlessness and Islamic State-linked
extremism.
Since the end of Libya's 2011 civil war Saif has been held by a
militia in Zintan, which is allied with the Tobruk-based internationally
recognized government against the Tripoli one.
He is also wanted by the International Criminal Court in The Hague on charges of crimes against humanity.
Charges
in the trial included recruiting mercenaries who were given Libyan
nationality, planning and carrying out attacks on civilian targets from
the air, forming armed groups, and shooting into crowds of
demonstrators.
Hundreds of militias in Libya are battling for
power and turf in a lawless environment that has allowed human
traffickers and kidnappers to flourish.
The UN envoy for Libya,
meanwhile, has urged the Islamist-led government in Tripoli to sign a
peace deal that would establish a unity government. Members of the
Tobruk government and regional leaders signed the unity accord in
Morocco on July 11.
https://news.vice.com/article/qaddafis-son-has-been-sentenced-to-death-for-war-crimes
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