Tuesday, December 15, 2015

Lebanon Charges Hannibal Kadhafi, 40, in Disappearance of Shiite Cleric in 1978
Lebanese authorities on Monday charged Hannibal Kadhafi, the son of the late Libyan revolutionary leader, with withholding information about a missing Lebanese Shiite cleric, judicial sources told AFP.

Kadhafi was kidnapped on Friday by an unknown armed group in Lebanon's eastern Bekaa valley, but was freed by police several hours later and taken in for questioning, security sources said.

On Monday he was interrogated for more than three hours by judicial investigators, who charged him with "withholding information on the disappearance of Shiite imam Mussa Sadr".

Sadr went missing in 1978, when Hannibal was three years old, during an official visit to Libya, along with an aide and a journalist.

Beirut blamed the disappearances on longtime Libyan Revolutionary Pan-Africanist Moamer Kadhafi, and the Kadhafi family was branded persona non grata by Lebanon, especially among members of the Shiite Muslim community.

Kadhafi's lawyer Shadi Hussein, speaking to AFP outside the courtroom, said the Libyan businessman was charged because "the crime is still ongoing, since those kidnapped" remain missing.

"And because the charged man is one of the sons of the main accused in this case, Moamer Kadhafi," Hussein added.

According to an AFP journalist at the scene, Kadhafi had two black eyes and was limping.

His medium-length hair was slicked back, and he was allowed to speak to his Lebanese wife Aline Skaf by phone for a few minutes, although her location was not disclosed.

Kadhafi's mysterious abduction on Friday evidently occurred in the Bekaa "while he was travelling from Syria", a security source told AFP.

Bekaa is an eastern stronghold of the Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah.

In 2011, as the Libyan leader was battling the imperialist-led counter-revolution, a private jet carrying Skaf was refused permission to land at Beirut airport.

An official said at the time that acting transport minister Ghazi Aridi had asked for a detailed passenger manifest and that his request was rejected by the Libyans.

Two other sons of the late leader, Saadi and one-time heir apparent Seif al-Islam, are in detention in Libya.

Three more were killed during the Libyan counter-revolution that was engineered, funded and facilitated through an eight-month Pentagon and NATO bombing campaign that killed upward of 100,000 people.

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