Seif is accused of crimes against humanity
Πηγή: Middle East Online
Jan 23 2012
International Criminal Court denies it has agreed Seif al-Islam, Gathafi's most prominent son, can be tried in Libya.
THE HAGUE - The International Criminal Court denied Monday that it had agreed that Seif al-Islam, slain Libyan leader Moamer Gathafi's most prominent son, can be tried in Libya.
"The ICC has made no decision on this matter," court spokesman Fadi el-Abdallah said in response to a claim by Libya's Justice Minister Ali H'mida Ashur that Seif would be judged by a Libyan court.
The ICC said earlier in a Twitter message that it had received a reply from the Libyan authorities to questions asked by its judges by a Monday deadline.
"The ICC has accepted that Seif al-Islam will be tried in Libya by the Libyan judiciary," Ashur said.
"The trial will take place in Libya. The Libyan justice is competent and we gave the file (on Seif) to the ICC on Friday," Ashur added.
Seif, 39, who was arrested on November 19, is in the custody of the military council of Zintan, a town 180 kilometres (110 miles), southwest of Tripoli.
He is wanted by the ICC on charges of crimes against humanity allegedly committed during the conflict in Libya.
Libya's National Transitional Council had already told the ICC in a letter published on November 24 that Tripoli wanted to try him.
The international court had asked Tripoli in December to say by January 6 "if and when" Seif would be handed over for trial in The Hague. That deadline was extended to January 23 at Libya's request because of the "security situation" in the country since the fall of Gathafi in October.
The judges also wanted to know if Seif had been arrested on the ICC warrant issued in June and if it was correct that he was being held incommunicado.
Human Rights Watch said on December 21 after visiting Seif in Zintan that he appeared to be held in good conditions but called on the Libyan authorities to grant him access to a lawyer.
The New-York based Human Rights Watch, in its World Report 2012, has raised concerns over Libya's judicial system.
"Libya’s interim government and its international supporters should make it an urgent priority to build a functioning justice system and begin legal reform that protects human rights after Moamer Gathafi," the group said in the report.
Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East and North Africa director at Human Rights Watch said in the report that "independent courts and the rule of law will help ensure stability in a country emerging from four decades of dictatorship and eight months of war."
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