Lebanon denies claims made by Libyan P.M. regarding “Hannibal Gaddafi”
The Media Office of the Lebanese Prime Minister denied any contact between Prime Minister Najib Mikati and his Libyan counterpart Abdel-Hamid Dbaiba regarding the case of Hannibal Gaddafi.
Hannibal Gaddafi, a son for the Libyan late leader Muammar Gaddafi, has been imprisoned in Lebanon since 2015. He has recently announced a hunger strike, a protest against his continued arbitrary detention, since his abduction from Syria in 2015.
“News is being circulated through social media claiming that Prime Minister of the Libyan Government of National Unity (GNU) has contacted PM Mikati regarding the case of Hannibal Gaddafi” Mikati’s Media Office stated.
“Mikati did not receive any contact from any Libyan party, and case of Hannibal Gaddafi is in the hands of the competent judiciary, and any follow-up to this file takes place through the competent judicial ways,” the statement added.
“Mikati expresses Lebanon’s keenness on the best relations with the Libyan people,” the statement noted.
On Thursday, Libya’s Presidential Council has recently established a committee, headed by Halima Abdel-Rahman, the Minister of Justice, to oversee the case of Hannibal Gaddafi’s imprisonment.
This decision places an emphasis on liaising with Lebanese authorities, to ensure the provision of humane conditions for Gaddafi.
A week ago, Hannibal, son of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, declared an open-ended hunger strike, protesting his ongoing imprisonment in Lebanon for the past eight years without trial.
In a statement released by his lawyer, Paul Romanos, Hannibal stated, “in the face of persistent injustice and abuse against me, it is time for me to be released after more than a decade in prison for an arrest and allegations of a crime I did not commit.”
He questioned “how, in a country of law and freedoms, such blatant violations of human rights could be ignored. How is it conceivable that a political prisoner is left without a fair trial for all these years? After persistent oppression against me, with no accountability, and deafening silence from those trusted to safeguard human rights, discarding its charter to the wind, I announce my hunger strike and hold all those who perpetuate injustice against me responsible for the consequences.”
The Lebanese judiciary has accused him of “concealing information related to the fate of Imam Musa Al-Sadr and his companions, Sheikh Mohammed Yacoub, and journalist Abbas Badreddin, who disappeared in Tripoli in 1978, upon their arrival at the invitation of Muammar Gaddafi.”
Hannibal was arrested in Lebanon in 2015. After his father’s death, he reportedly sought refuge in Syria, but was kidnapped there by members of the Lebanese Yacoub family.