Muammar Gaddafi’s son Seif al-Islam has been captured, Libya’s new authorities announced yesterday, ending a three-month manhunt for the murdered dictator’s longtime heir apparent.

Seif al-Islam was spared the brutal lynching dealt out to his father

Video footage showed the younger Gaddafi, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity, being hauled off into captivity in a northwestern hill town after getting off a flight from the desert south where he was seized.

A fist was thrown as Seif al-Islam was mobbed by a large crowd of curious onlookers, many of them veterans of the eight-month uprising, but he was spared the brutal lynching dealt out to his father.

Sporting a brown cloak and headdress, Seif showed no sign of emotion as he braved the surging spectators at the small airport terminal in Zintan, a mainly Berber town in the Nafusa mountains southwest of Tripoli that was a launchpad for the rebels in their victorious push on the capital.

The 39-year-old who is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC), was “arrested in southern Libya,” Mohammed al-Allagui justice minister in the National Transitional Council (NTC), told AFP, without elaborating on the circumstances or even the date of his capture.

As the last top figure of the Gaddafi family to have evaded capture or not to have escaped abroad, news of his arrest was greeted in Tripoli and in Benghazi by gunmen firing into the air in celebration and the honking of car horns.

It came a day before the NTC was expected to name a new government and three months after Seif al-Islam was last seen in public.

The operations chief of the victorious rebels in Zintan, Bashir Taib, told a news conference that his fighters had arrested Seif along with three aides in the Ubari region of southern Libya, an escape route to Algeria and Niger.

A Libyan television channel, Al-Ahrar, broadcast footage of Seif heavily bearded and leaning on the end of a bed, with three fingers of his right hand bandaged and a blanket on his legs.

The urbane Gaddafi son, who was normally clean-shaven in his days at the heart of the regime, was long seen as a potential reformer from within but proved a diehard apologist of brutal repression in the face of the popular uprising launched in mid-February.

The ICC issued warrants on June 27 against Seif al-Islam, as well as his father and Abdullah al-Senussi, the late dictator’s intelligence chief, on charges of crimes against humanity in crushing anti-regime protests.

Taib said he had no information on Senussi’s current whereabouts, but the Tripoli council of former rebel fighters said he had been sighted in Al-Girah region, also in Libya’s Saharan desert south.

The ICC said Libya has an obligation to surrender Seif but did not exclude the possibility of a trial in Libya.

“The Libyan authorities have an obligation to cooperate with the court, including with respect to the arrest and surrender of Seif al-Islam to the court as indicated in the UN’s resolution,” ICC spokesman Fadi El-Abdallah told AFP.

But he added: “If Libyan authorities believe that a trial at national level is a better solution, they can ask that the case not be admitted in The Hague, based on the court’s complementary principle.

“If they want a trial in Libya, they must submit a request for dismissal, and procedures in Libya must be conducted on the same charges as those contained in the warrant of the ICC,” he said.

ICC chief prosecutor Luis Moreno-Ocampo is to travel to Libya this week for talks on Seif al-Islam’s case.

Lieutenant General Charles Bouchard, the Canadian who headed the Nato-led air war in Libya, said a fair trial for Seif al-Islam was “critical” to show the new government’s legitimacy.

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