Twitter deletes Saif al-Islam’s account
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi called on Libyans to participate massively in the elections
Hours after opening an account on Twitter, the site closed Saif al-Islam Gaddafi’s official account after he had launched it yesterday, tweeting the need to go to the branches of the Electoral Commission in Libya to receive their electoral cards so that they can decide their future and the future of their children, as he put it.
He stressed that “the electoral cards that are available at the present time in the offices of the High Electoral Commission are a pass to the ballot boxes towards participating in independent national decision-making, to enhance the legitimacy of the new political institutions that will be elected to advance the country, rehabilitate and reconstruct it and take the decisions it needs to restore it to its position.” first among countries.
And Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, a candidate for the presidential elections, called on Wednesday in his first official statement, “all believers in the comprehensive national reconciliation project to turn to the electoral process by heading to the offices of the High Elections Commission, to receive their electoral cards, to participate in the electoral process to be held on the 24th of next December.” .
Saif Al-Islam concluded his statement by saying: “I hope that your response will be broad and your interaction positive and aware of the nation’s interest and your love for it.”
Saif al-Islam launched an official account for him on the social networking site “Twitter”, and demanded in his first tweet, the Libyans should go to the branches of the Electoral Commission to receive their electoral cards so that they can decide their future and the future of their children, as he put it, before the site intends to close it.
The website of the High Elections Commission in Libya was hacked on Monday, and hackers published news about the rejection of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi’s candidacy for the presidency
This comes while armed militias closed the electoral centers in the cities of Zawiya and Gharyan, and suspended work at the headquarters of the High Electoral Commission in the city of Zliten, to express their rejection of Gaddafi’s candidacy for the presidential elections.
The commission later withdrew the news that it had allegedly rejected Gaddafi’s candidacy for the upcoming presidential elections “due to the protests”.
These militias announced the rejection of the elections, in the form of the High Electoral Commission accepting the nomination papers of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, and also warned that holding these elections in their current form will return Libya to the first district and will result in a war whose extent and results are unknow.