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Gaddafi son offers to surrender to Hague: Libyans

1 of 15. Mustafa Abdul Jalil (L), Chairman of Libya's National Transitional Council (NTC), Qatar's Crown Prince Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad al-Thani (C) and Qatar's Armed Forces Chief of Staff Major-General Hamad bin Ali Al-Attiyah attend the Conference of The Friends Committee in Support of Libya in Doha, October 26, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Mohammed Dabbous

TRIPOLI | Wed Oct 26, 2011 7:23pm EDT

TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, who once vowed to die fighting on Libyan soil, now wants to face international justice instead and avoid any chance of meeting the same grisly end as his father, Libyan officials said.

An official of the ruling National Transitional Council (NTC) said on Wednesday that Saif al-Islam, the only one of Muammar Gaddafi's eight children still on the run, had proposed surrendering to the International Criminal Court (ICC), which has indicted him for war crimes.

Surrender by 39-year-old Saif al-Islam would close another chapter in the four-decade history of Gaddafi family rule, as the United Nations discusses an end to its Libyan mandate that allowed NATO to bomb the country and help rebels to take power.

He was widely seen as Muammar Gaddafi's favored son and his heir apparent.

Saif al-Islam wanted to surrender to the Dutch-based ICC with his relative, former intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi, said Abdel Majid Mlegta, an official of the NTC which overran the last Muammar Gaddafi stronghold of Sirte a week ago.

"They are proposing a way to hand themselves over to The Hague," said Mlegta.

The ICC indicted Muammar Gaddafi, Saif al-Islam and Senussi for their roles in using force to try to put down the uprising which began in February.

An ICC spokesman said it had no confirmation of any talks about Saif al-Islam's surrender.

ANOTHER U-TURN

NTC officials have said Saif al-Islam is hiding in Libya's southern desert after failing to find a safe haven in a neighboring country like Algeria or Niger, which have offered refuge to the other four Gaddafi children who survived the eight-month civil war.

Any surrender would mark a U-turn by Saif al-Islam, an internationally well-connected philanthropist and liberal reformer who turned abruptly into a soldier ready to die rather than capitulate when rebels rose up against his father.

"We fight here in Libya; we die here in Libya," he told Reuters Television in an interview earlier this year.

He now appears to prefer the prospect of a Dutch prison cell rather than risk falling into the hands of NTC forces.

NTC fighters seized Muammar Gaddafi last week after they overran his hometown of Sirte. Within hours he was dead, although it remains unclear who killed him, and his rotting corpse was put on public display for four days before being buried in a secret desert grave on Tuesday.

At the United Nations, envoys said the Security Council planned to end U.N. authorization this week for a no-fly zone and NATO intervention in Libya despite calls from the NTC for it to wait.

The Security Council made the authorization in March to protect Libyans from the forces that Muammar Gaddafi had deployed to suppress pro-democracy uprisings across the country.

Libya's people were "looking forward to terminating the no-fly zone over Libya as well as terminating the mandate accorded by Security Council resolution 1973 to protect civilians as soon as possible," Libyan Deputy U.N. Ambassador Ibrahim Dabbashi told the 15-nation council on Wednesday.

"In accordance with the initial assessments, the date of October 31 is a logical date to terminate this mandate," he said.

But he said the NTC had not yet made an official decision on whether to request termination of the U.N. mandate, which authorized members of NATO and other U.N. member states to take "all necessary measures" to protect Libyan civilians.

NATO bombing prevented Muammar Gaddafi's forces from taking the rebel stronghold of Benghazi and allowed often disorganized rebel units to eventually control the whole county.

Dabbashi said the government needed more time to assess the security situation in Libya and its ability to monitor its borders.

Western diplomats said issues the NTC had suggested it would like NATO to help with, including border security, fell outside the U.N. mandate to protect civilians and enforce a no-fly zone.

"The job was to protect civilians and from NATO's point of view, that mission has been accomplished," a diplomat told Reuters on condition of anonymity. "There's no point in delaying termination of the mandate."

(Additional reporting by Samia Nakhoul in Dubai, Regan Doherty in Doha, Louis Charbonneau at the United Nations and David Brunnstrom in Brussels; Writing by David Stamp; Editing by Ralph Gowling)

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Comments (8)
Tiu wrote:
NATO would love to help (it’s self to the oil)… although it will hurt.

Oct 26, 2011 9:25am EDT  --  Report as abuse
theotherday wrote:
What kind of democracy do the USA, UK and France provide in Libya when it totally based on foreign army and weapon instead of Libyans own will? Why it is OK for NATO-established authorities to kill their political opponents without any proper court process and judgment? Who is responsible for reported the other day mass execution of Gadaffi’s supporters? Who is responsible for killing prisoners of war by NATO-established Libya’s authorities? Why the international criminal court is silent about these current crimes? I’ve started to realize how stinky, disgusting and cynic modern western world’s order is. The same few countries – USA, UK, France, etc. do their business via a branch of international organisations under their total control.

Oct 26, 2011 10:53am EDT  --  Report as abuse
OneWorldTruth wrote:
To protect democracy, we should not re-elect BarBarak. America is mistrusted by more people in the world because of his foreign policy disasters. Pakistan is angry, so are the Middle East and Africa. With his new-found love for killing, any American that threatens establishment in the least will be slaughtered. Democracy & protection have been desecrated in Libya, where Sharia law now oppresses women without means to escape through divorce from being one of several ragdolls to bearded men. Former justice minister Jalil, who use to implement the human rights abuses whilst it was blamed on Gaddafi now has a free pass to escalate it. The KillerY Kill_INtons should explain how life in Libya is now better. What they have done is to use/recycle taxpayers’ defensive assets to massacre & steal resources so that they will get hundreds of millions of extra campain money from banking & oil maffias!

Oct 26, 2011 11:42am EDT  --  Report as abuse
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