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ICC: Libya wants Qaddafi son’s trial at home

Saif al-Islam Qaddafi, son of ousted Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, appears in front of journalists at his father's residential complex in the Libyan capital of Tripoli Aug. 23, 2011. (AFP/Getty Images)

(AP) AMSTERDAM – The Libyan government has formally challenged the International Criminal Court’s

right to try Muammar Qaddafi’s son for war crimes, arguing that he should be tried in Libya despite concerns he may not

receive a fair trial there.

Saif al-Islam

Qaddafi, son of ousted Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, appears in front of journalists at his father's residential complex

in the Libyan capital of Tripoli Aug. 23, 2011. (AFP/Getty Images)

The Hague, Netherlands-based court is authorized by the U.N. to try

war crimes committed last year as rebels fought the Qaddafi regime. It has issued an arrest warrant for the late dictator’s

son, Saif al-Islam, on charges of killing and persecuting civilians during the uprising.

The court said Tuesday it had

received a formal submission from Libya’s new leadership arguing that Saif al-Islam, along with Qaddafi’s former military

intelligence chief, Abdullah al-Senoussi, should be tried on Libyan soil.

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Saif al-Islam was captured by rebels last year and is being held in the

western town of Zintan, while al-Senoussi was arrested last month in Mauritania. Libya is seeking his extradition.

The

conflict between the court and country boils down to the question of whether Libya is capable of conducting a fair trial for

the pair.

Under international law, a country has both the right and the duty to prosecute suspected war criminals.

However, court spokeswoman Sonia Robla explained Tuesday that once the court has issued an arrest warrant for a suspect, it

cannot retract it unless judges believe suspects will be tried for substantially the same crimes they were indicted for, and

that they will receive a fair trial.

Libya’s filing says it seeks to do exactly that.

“Libya respectfully

submits that…its (own) national judicial system is actively investigating Mr. Qaddafi and Mr. al-Senoussi for their alleged

criminal responsibility for multiple acts of murder and persecution…amounting to crimes against humanity,” the application

released Tuesday said.

Human rights groups have expressed concern that Saif al-Islam will not get a fair trial in

Libya, especially given the central government’s lack of control over some areas, including Zintan, in the aftermath of the

civil war.

Muammar Qaddafi also was indicted by the ICC, but he was killed by rebels who captured him last year and

his case has since been dropped.

The court had set Tuesday as the deadline for a Libyan challenge to its jurisdiction,

rejecting the government’s requests for more time.

Libya insisted that its desire to try the pair “reflects a genuine

willingness and ability to bring the persons concerned to justice.”

“To deny the Libyan people this historic

opportunity to eradicate the long-standing culture of impunity would be manifestly inconsistent with the object and purpose”

of the international court.

The International Criminal Court’s Prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo has said he has evidence

linking Saif al-Islam to supervising and planning recruitment of mercenaries to fight last year’s uprising. Moreno-Ocampo is

cooperating with Libyan authorities. He says ICC judges must ultimately decide whether or not to remand the case to a Libyan

court.

“The Libyan general prosecutor has more evidence that confirms our reports and even more that links Saif to

more crimes, some (where) he was involved in with his own hands as he executed people,” Moreno-Ocampo told The Associated

Press last month on a visit to Libya.

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