Libya resists handing Qaddafi's son over to ICC for trial



ZINTAN, Libya // Libya's new leaders said yesterday that they will try Muammar Qaddafi's son at home and not hand him over to the International Criminal Court where he's charged with crimes against humanity.

The government also announced the capture of the toppled regime's intelligence minister, who is also wanted by the court.

However, the former rebel faction that captured Saif Al Islam Qaddafi a day earlier is refusing to deliver him to national authorities in Tripoli, raising concern over whether he will get a proper trial and demonstrating the interim leaders' weak hold over their fractured nation.

In the capital, Information minister Mahmoud Shammam said ex-intelligence minister Abdullah Al Senussi was captured alive yesterday by a brigade from a southern region called Fazan, not far from where Qaddafi's son was seized on Saturday while trying to flee to Niger.

Though they are wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC), Libya will likely seek to try both men at home.

Speaking before Al Senussi's capture, Mr Shammam said Saif Al Islam, the ousted Libyan leader's one-time heir apparent, must be tried in Libya, even though the country's new leaders have yet to establish a court system.

"It is only fair for the Libyan people that he is tried here. ... Saif Al Islam committed crimes against the Libyan people," Mr Shammam told the Associated Press.

"The ICC is just a secondary court, and the people of Libya will not allow Saif Al Islam to be tried outside," Mr Shammam said.

Saif Al Islam, who was once the face of reform in Libya and who led his father's drive to emerge from pariah status over the last decade, was captured by fighters from the small western mountain town of Zintan who had tracked him to the desert in the south of the country.

He was then flown to Zintan, 150 kilometres south-west of Tripoli, where he remains in a secret location. The faction of rebel fighters from the western mountains formed one of the key forces against Qaddafi's regime during the six-month civil war.

Even after Qaddafi's fall in August and after his capture and killing in October, Libya's numerous and sometime competing rebel factions have refused to disarm, raising fears of new violence and instability.

"We have priority over Saif Al Islam - we caught him, and we were the forefront leaders in this revolution," said Tahir Al-Turki, head of the small town's local council, explaining why Saif Al Islam would not be sent to the capital.

"He will be safer with us in Zintan. We don't know who will take him or deal with him in Tripoli," he said.

That position shows how powerful regional factions backed by bands of armed fighters are able to act autonomously, even on issues of the highest national interest.

Mr Shammam, the information minister, played down suggestions that a power struggle was brewing over the high-value prisoner or that the position of local officials was undermining the authority of the national leadership.

He said the national leadership had no objection to keeping Saif Al Islam in Zintan until a trial can be organised, but that the small town was not capable of organising and holding the trial itself.

"If you catch a criminal in Texas, you're not going to bring him to Washington, are you?" Mr Shammam told the AP.

Authorities in the National Transitional Council would also likely face challenges in organising a trial.

Libya, under the elder Qaddafi's 42-year rule, had intentionally weak state institutions and a government that barely existed. Qaddafi, who held no title, had ultimate authority and did not want the development of any other power centres that might challenge him.

As a result, a capable court system, like other state bodies, must be built from scratch.

The ICC prosecutor Luis Moreno Ocampo told the AP Saturday that he will travel to Libya today for talks with the NTC on where the trial will take place.

Mr Ocampo said that while national governments have the first right to try their own citizens for war crimes, his primary goal was to ensure Saif Al Islam has a fair trial.

International human rights groups have called for Saif Al Islam to be quickly sent to the court in The Hague, Netherlands, citing the apparent killings in custody of his father and brother Muatassim on October 20 as "particular cause for concern."

The two were captured alive last month by another strong regional group, the Misurata fighters, who also took part in the march on Tripoli that toppled the regime.

By the end of the day they were seized on, they both ended up dead while still in the hands of Misurata fighters in circumstances that have yet to be explained. The Misurata fighters held onto their corpses and displayed them as trophies for days in a commercial refrigerator in their city, where people lined up to view the decomposing bodies.

Authorities there refused to hand the bodies over to national officials and buried them in a secret location.

Libya expert George Joffe of Cambridge University said the decision to keep Saif Al Islam in Zintan and possibly try him in that town shows that the NTC has a tenuous hold over the country.

"You are looking at an organisation that has never been able to establish itself properly in the country," Mr Joffe said. "There is a degree of chaos and it is not clear that the NTC can grab control of it."

Meanwhile, new details emerged about Saif Al Islam's capture in which fighters swarmed a two-car convoy in the south of the country that some officials said was on its way to Niger. The car carrying him got stuck in the sand while trying to escape.

Al-Ajami Al-Etery, who led the operation, said Saif Al Islam tried to hide his features by throwing sand on his face when he stepped out of his car.

"He said his name was Abdel-Salam and he pretended to be a shepherd, but we found him out and arrested him," he told the AP.

The biog

Born: near Sialkot, Pakistan, 1981

Profession: Driver

Family: wife, son (11), daughter (8)

Favourite drink: chai karak

Favourite place in Dubai: The neighbourhood of Khawaneej. “When I see the old houses over there, near the date palms, I can be reminded of my old times. If I don’t go down I cannot recall my old times.”

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Brief scores:

Manchester United 4

Young 13', Mata 28', Lukaku 42', Rashford 82'

Fulham 1

Kamara 67' (pen),

Red card: Anguissa (68')

Man of the match: Juan Mata (Man Utd)

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TRAP

Starring: Josh Hartnett, Saleka Shyamalan, Ariel Donaghue

Director: M Night Shyamalan

Rating: 3/5

The%20Specs
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BORDERLANDS

Starring: Cate Blanchett, Kevin Hart, Jamie Lee Curtis

Director: Eli Roth

Rating: 0/5

Meydan race card

6.30pm: Baniyas (PA) Group 2 Dh125,000 (Dirt) 1,400m
7.05pm: Maiden (TB) Dh165,000 (D) 1,200m​​​​​​​
7.40pm: Maiden (TB) Dh165,000 (D) 1,400m​​​​​​​
8.15pm: Handicap (TB) Dh170,000 (D) 1,900m​​​​​​​
8.50pm: Rated Conditions (TB) Dh240,000 (D) 1,600m​​​​​​​
9.25pm: Handicap (TB) Dh175,000 (D)1,200m
10pm: Handicap (TB) Dh165,000 (D) 1,400m

Jawan
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What is the definition of an SME?

SMEs in the UAE are defined by the number of employees, annual turnover and sector. For example, a “small company” in the services industry has six to 50 employees with a turnover of more than Dh2 million up to Dh20m, while in the manufacturing industry the requirements are 10 to 100 employees with a turnover of more than Dh3m up to Dh50m, according to Dubai SME, an agency of the Department of Economic Development.

A “medium-sized company” can either have staff of 51 to 200 employees or 101 to 250 employees, and a turnover less than or equal to Dh200m or Dh250m, again depending on whether the business is in the trading, manufacturing or services sectors. 

Top tips

Create and maintain a strong bond between yourself and your child, through sensitivity, responsiveness, touch, talk and play. “The bond you have with your kids is the blueprint for the relationships they will have later on in life,” says Dr Sarah Rasmi, a psychologist.
Set a good example. Practise what you preach, so if you want to raise kind children, they need to see you being kind and hear you explaining to them what kindness is. So, “narrate your behaviour”.
Praise the positive rather than focusing on the negative. Catch them when they’re being good and acknowledge it.
Show empathy towards your child’s needs as well as your own. Take care of yourself so that you can be calm, loving and respectful, rather than angry and frustrated.
Be open to communication, goal-setting and problem-solving, says Dr Thoraiya Kanafani. “It is important to recognise that there is a fine line between positive parenting and becoming parents who overanalyse their children and provide more emotional context than what is in the child’s emotional development to understand.”
 

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Neil Thomson – THE BIO

Family: I am happily married to my wife Liz and we have two children together.

Favourite music: Rock music. I started at a young age due to my father’s influence. He played in an Indian rock band The Flintstones who were once asked by Apple Records to fly over to England to perform there.

Favourite book: I constantly find myself reading The Bible.

Favourite film: The Greatest Showman.

Favourite holiday destination: I love visiting Melbourne as I have family there and it’s a wonderful place. New York at Christmas is also magical.

Favourite food: I went to boarding school so I like any cuisine really.