Thursday , February 5 2026

Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam killed in Libya

06-02-2026

TRIPOLI: Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of Libya’s late longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi, was killed on Tuesday by a “four-man commando” in his home in western Libya’s Zintan, his French lawyer, Marcel Ceccaldi, told media.

“For now, we don’t know” who was behind the killing, Ceccaldi said, adding that he was told by one of Saif’s close associates about ten days ago “that there were problems with his security.”

Saif went from his ather’s heir apparent to a decade of captivity and obscurity in a remote hill town before launching a presidential bid that helped derail an attempted election.

Sources close to the family, his lawyer Khaled el-Zaydi and Libyan media on Tuesday confirmed the assassination.

Details surrounding the circumstances of his death were not immediately clear.

Despite holding no official position, he was once seen as the most powerful figure in the oil-rich North African country after his autocratic father, Muammar Gaddafi, who ruled for more than four decades.

Saif shaped policy and mediated high-profile, sensitive diplomatic missions.

He led talks on Libya abandoning its weapons of mass destruction. He negotiated compensation for the families of those killed in the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988.

Determined to rid Libya of its pariah status, Saif engaged with the West and championed himself as a reformer, calling for a constitution and respect for human rights.

Educated at the London School of Economics and a fluent English speaker, he was once seen by many governments as the acceptable, Western-friendly face of Libya but when a rebellion broke out against Gaddafi’s long rule in 2011, Saif immediately chose family and clan loyalties over his many friendships to become an architect of a brutal crackdown on rebels, whom he called rats.

Speaking to media at the time of the revolt, he said: “We fight here in Libya, we die here in Libya.”

He warned that rivers of blood would flow and the government would fight to the last man and woman and bullet.

“All of Libya will be destroyed. We will need 40 years to reach an agreement on how to run the country, because today, everyone will want to be president, or emir and everybody will want to run the country,” he said, wagging his finger at the camera in a TV broadcast.

After rebels took over the capital, Tripoli, Saif tried to flee to neighboring Niger dressed as a Bedouin tribesman.

The Abu Bakr Sadik Brigade militia captured him on a desert road and flew him to the western town of Zintan about one month after his father was hunted down and summarily shot dead by rebels.

“I’m staying here. They’ll empty their guns into me the second I go out there,” he said in comments captured in an audio recording as hundreds of men thronged around an old Libyan air force transport plane.

Saif was betrayed to his rebel captors by a Libyan nomad.

He spent the next six years detained in Zintan, a far cry from the charmed life he lived under Gaddafi when he had pet tigers, hunted with falcons and mingled with British high society on trips to London.

Human Rights Watch met him in Zintan. Hanan Salah, its Libya director, told media at that time that he did not allege ill treatment. “We did raise concerns about Saif being held in solitary confinement for most, if not all, of the time that he had been detained,” she said. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)

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