Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of Libya’s former dictator Muammar Gaddafi, has appeared in court accused of plotting to escape from the jail in which he has been held since he was arrested in November 2011.
Libya accuses Gaddafi of
conspiring to break out of his detention, in the western mountain town
of Zintan, aided by a lawyer from the international criminal court
(ICC), Melinda Taylor, who was herself detained by Libya for three weeks
last summer.
It was only the second appearance in court by Gaddafi, 40, since he was captured trying to flee Libya by former rebels, Guardian reports.
The case is separate
from charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity he faces from
both Libya and the ICC, but Thursday’s 20-minute hearing was branded a
farce by his British lawyer, John Jones QC.
“It’s a farce from start
to finish,” said Jones, who was not in court. “His detention is Libya’s
Guantánamo Bay. He’s been held incommunicado for 17 months without any
meaningful judicial process.”
Gaddafi looked lean,
smiling to journalists from the dock and giving a thumbs-up during the
brief hearing. Prosecutors showed a pen and a watch they say contain a
secret camera and recorder which Taylor was accused of smuggling into a
meeting with Gaddafi last year. The court appointed two local lawyers to
represent him, adjourning the case until September.
Libya alleges that
Taylor had the items with her during a meeting in June last year.
Prosecutors say they formed part of a conspiracy to organise an escape.
Thursday’s hearing
throws fuel on the fire of a simmering row between Libya and the ICC
over who should try Gaddafi, with the court in The Hague demanding he be
handed over to their custody, and yet to rule on whether to back
Libya’s plans for a war crimes trial on home turf.
Gaddafi was once
considered the heir-apparent to his father, who was captured and killed
by Libya’s rebels in 2011, and is jointly charged with Libya’s former
intelligence chief Abdullah Senussi, also in custody in Libya, of crimes
against civilians during the Arab spring uprising.
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