United Nations, Friday. International Criminal Court prosecutor Fatou
Bensouda on Thursday renewed a demand that Libya hand over Muammar
Gaddafi’s son to face crimes against humanity charges.
But Libya
said that letting Seif al-Islam Gaddafi go on trial outside the country
would worsen unrest gripping the country and would even be a threat to
his life.
Bensouda called on the UN Security Council to press
Libya over the deceased strongman’s son, and also for international help
including “telephone intercepts” and information on money transfers
linked to the Gaddafi family and their associates.
The ICC and
Libyan government have been wrangling over Seif al-Islam since the
overthrow and killing of his father in October 2011.
The ICC ruled this year against letting Libya put Muammar Gaddafi’s son on trial at home.
Seif
al-Islam is held by a brigade of former rebel fighters and many rights
groups say he will not get a fair trial in Libya where the authorities
face mounting security concerns amid attacks on government and judicial
targets.
Libya has said it will give the ICC new information on
the Seif al-Islam case. But Bensouda said it was “fundamentally
important” for the Security Council to pressure Libya over the case and
for all states to respect ICC warrants.
“Political considerations
have no place in law, impartially and independently applied. I strongly
urge the government of Libya to surrender Seif al-Islam Gaddafi to the
court without further delay,” the chief prosecutor added.
Libya’s
UN envoy Ibrahim Dabbashi said the Libyan people “want to see justice”
and no Libyan government could accept a trial of Seif al-Islam outside
the country.
“That would then destabilize social peace which is
quite precarious, and indeed it might constitute a threat to the lives
of” Seif al-Islam and Gaddafi’s intelligence chief Abdullah al-Senussi,
Dabbashi told the Security Council.
The ICC has agreed to let al-Senussi be tried in Libya. And Bensouda announced that she would not appeal that decision.
“The
challenge is now for Libya to demonstrate to the world that al-Senussi
will receive a genuine, fair, impartial and speedy trial that respects
all his rights,” Bensouda said.
Dabbashi said that any trials of Gaddafi figures in Libya would meet international standards. (AFP)
The ICC is still investigating several cases in Libya linked to Kadhafi’s efforts to crush the uprising against him.
Bensouda
said that Security Council and international help would be “crucial for
the collossal task of collecting evidence to untangle the modus
operandi of the networks responsible for committing crimes.”
She
said ICC investigators “will require telephone intercepts and sustained
followups on transfers of funds to establish the whereabouts and
movements of persons under investigation.”
Bensouda said that
Security Council and international help would be “crucial for the
collossal task of collecting evidence to untangle the modus operandi of
the networks responsible for committing crimes.”
Bensouda and several Security Council countries praised efforts by the Libyan government to reinforce state authority.
But the ICC prosecutor and several envoys raised the alarm over thousands of detainees held by militias in Libya.
“It
is a matter of great concern that thousands of detainees remain in
uncertain conditions in the country, with multiple and apparently
well-founded allegations of torture and even killings in detention,”
Bensouda said.
“Unless this problem is effectively addressed now,
it will only escalate with time,” she added, calling on the government
to “speedily” move the detainees to state facilities for a proper trial.
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