HomeInternationalLibya prosecutor opposes Gaddafi's presidential bid

Libya prosecutor opposes Gaddafi’s presidential bid

Date:

Related stories

Baltasar Ebang Engonga faces scandal as explicit videos leak

Baltasar Ebang Engonga, the Director General of Equatorial Guinea’s...

Kenyan Senate impeaches Deputy President Gachagua

In a groundbreaking development, Kenya’s Senate has voted to...

Possible third assassination attempt on Trump stopped at rally location

Authorities in California confirmed the arrest of a man...

Elon Musk launches $47 referral scheme for free speech petition

Billionaire CEO Elon Musk has launched a new initiative...

Tunisian presidential candidate jailed for using fraudulent certificate

With just days to Tunisia’s presidential election, Ayachi Zammel,...
spot_img

Libya’s military prosecutor, Mohamed Gharouda, has asked the electoral body to suspend processing the paperwork for the presidential candidacy of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of the country’s late ruler Muammar Gaddafi.

The prosecutor also asked that the paperwork for warlord Khalifa Haftar – who is also seeking the presidency – be suspended.

The electoral commission on Sunday said that Mr Gaddafi had submitted the necessary documents as a presidential candidate in the elections set for next month.

But in a letter to the electoral commission, Mr Gharouda warned that the commission would be held responsible for consequences if the processing of the paperwork was not halted.

“Saif al-Islam and Khalifa Haftar have been accused of criminal acts” and their presidential bids “must be halted until the investigation is completed”, the military attorney-general’s office says in a letter.

The registration of Mr Gaddafi’s candidacy, although expected, has jolted people in Libya and abroad for his role in the brutal crackdown of the uprising against his father’s rule.

He is still wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of war crimes committed in 2011.

Mr Haftar, who leads forces in eastern Libya, is wanted by a US court for allegedly torturing Libyans during the war. (BBC)

Subscribe

Latest stories

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here