
MUAMMAR GADDAFI’S SON SAIF AL-ISLAM GADDAFI ASSASSINATED
Who did it? Sources on the ground in Libya suspect that British intelligence used local proxies to assassinate the man seen by many as the one who could reunite Libya, 15 years after NATO bombed Libya into a failed state during their campaign to kill Muammar Gaddafi. Muammar Gaddafi’s Libya had the highest standard of living in Africa. It had a fully-functioning welfare state, and people could not leave its shores to get to Europe in dinghies.
France could also be implicated. It has deep motives in Libya, and we know from Wikileaks cables that France wanted a ‘greater share in Libya’s oil production’ in 2011, and Sarkozy was negotiating to reserve as much as 35% of Libya’s oil production.
We know that the US, UK, and France feared Muammar Gaddafi’s plan for a pan-African Gold Dinar currency, as well as his promoting of pan-African unity, a legacy inherited by Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi.
Saif was a Libyan political figure. He was the second son of the late Libyan leader and his second wife Safia Farkash. He was a part of his father’s inner circle, performing public relations and diplomatic roles on his behalf. He publicly turned down his father’s offer of the country’s second highest post and held no official government position. According to United States Department of State officials in Tripoli, during his father’s reign, he was the second most widely recognized person in Libya, being at times the de facto prime minister, and was mentioned as a possible successor,
Libyan news outlet Fawasel Media cited Othman as saying that armed men killed Gaddafi in his home in the town of Zintan, some 136km (85 miles) southwest of the Libyan capital, Tripoli.
Gaddafi’s political team later released a statement, saying that “four masked men” stormed his house and killed him in a “cowardly and treacherous assassination”.
The statement said that he clashed with the assailants, who closed the security cameras at the house “in a desperate attempt to conceal traces of their heinous crimes”.
Khaled al-Mishri, the former head of the Tripoli-based High State Council, an internationally recognised government body, called for an “urgent and transparent investigation” into the killing in a social media post.









