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Gaddafi Son Saif Al-Islam Headed To Mali, Official Says

Seif Al Islam Mali

RUKMINI CALLIMACHI   10/27/11 03:18 PM ET   AP

DAKAR, Senegal — Moammar Gadhafi's intelligence chief who is wanted by Interpol fled to Mali overnight after making his way across Niger where he has been hiding for several days in the country's northern desert, an adviser to Niger's president said Thursday.

The official, who could not be named because of the sensitive nature of the matter, said that Abdullah al-Senoussi entered Mali late Wednesday via the Kidal region, which shares a border with Niger. He is guarded by a unit of about a dozen people and arrived in a convoy piloted by ethnic Tuaregs from Mali.

The adviser said that Gadhafi's hunted son, Seif al-Islam, is also on his way to Mali and is traveling across the invisible line separating Algeria from Niger. The area, a lawless expanse of dunes stretching for hundreds of miles, has been used for years by drug traffickers as well as an offshoot of al-Qaida and has nearly no government presence.

"Senoussi is in Mali," said the adviser, an influential elder in the ethnic Tuareg community which overwhelmingly supported Gadhafi and remained loyal to him despite Niger's official stance backing the country's new rulers.

"Seif is going to Mali too. He is right now between Niger and Algeria. He is in the territory at the frontier between the two, heading to Mali," the adviser said. "For the moment, they do not plan to approach the government. They are protected by the Tuaregs ... and they are choosing to stay in the desert."

The region through which they traveled is the traditional home of the Tuaregs, the desert dwellers whose members live in the nations abutting the Sahara desert from Mauritania in the east, through Mali, Niger, Libya and Chad. The group felt a kinship with Gadhafi who elevated the nomadic life by pitching his tent in the courtyards of four-star hotels in Europe, and hundreds of Tuareg youth from both Mali and Niger traveled to Libya to fight as Gadhafi's hired guns in the final months of the conflict.

Videos posted online showing how Gadhafi was abused after he was caught, and his body after he was killed, have deeply offended Tuareg communities throughout Africa.

Starting at dinnertime Wednesday, Tuareg elders met in Agadez to discuss the conflict posed by the arrival of Gadhafi's most trusted collaborators in light of the Niger's government's commitment to hand over anyone wanted by the world court. Both the son and the intelligence chief are wanted by the International Criminal Court which issued warrants for their arrest in May for crimes against humanity committed during the monthslong struggle for power in Libya.

About 30 other regime loyalists, including another Gadhafi son, al-Saadi, fled to Niger in September, but were apprehended by Niger's government and placed under house arrest.

In Mali, the Director of State Security Hildebert Traore said he could not confirm that the fugitive intelligence chief had crossed into the country.

"Up to now, we have not been able to determine the position of Mr. Sanoussi, whether he's in our territory or someone else's," Traore said. "People like him usually take care to contact the authorities of the country in question before entering it, but he has not contacted us to say that he's coming."

Observers in Niger and Mali suspect that the wanted members of Gadhafi's regime did not stop in Niger because of worries that the government will hand them over to the International Criminal Court, or ICC. In Niger's capital, the chief of staff of President Mahamadou Issoufou reiterated the government's position.

"We are hearing the same reports as you, that Seif is in our zone. But our security forces have not run into him," said Massoudou Hassoumi. "The day that we run into him we will arrest him. He is pursued by the ICC, and we will hand him over in keeping with our international obligations."

In Mali, a tribal elder from the country's north where the fugitives are believed to be hiding, said that he doesn't think Mali will shield them from the ICC.

"People on the ground are saying that Senoussi is there," said the elder who asked not to be named because of the delicate nature of the issue.

"I don't know if Gadhafi's son is there too. It's a small group of vehicles which is to the northeast of Kidal Town. It's possible that they are with other Tuaregs who have returned from Libya," the elder said. "I think they know if they came here that Mali is going to hand them over to the ICC. In fact I think that's why they came here because they want to be safely handed over."

Niger's government, which is heavily dependent on aid, has been put in an impossible spot, forced to choose between its obligations to the international community and its powerful Tuareg community. The problem is similar in Mali, but President Amadou Toumani Toure is at the tail-end of his second term and is not seeking re-election, making him possibly freer to choose a course of action without fear of political repercussions.

___

Martin Vogl contributed to this report from Bamako, Mali.

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DAKAR, Senegal — Moammar Gadhafi's intelligence chief who is wanted by Interpol fled to Mali overnight after making his way across Niger where he has been hiding for several days in the country'...
DAKAR, Senegal — Moammar Gadhafi's intelligence chief who is wanted by Interpol fled to Mali overnight after making his way across Niger where he has been hiding for several days in the country'...
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Pucker
My micro-bio is pending approval
10:29 AM on 10/28/2011
Looks like Plan D has been enacted.
10:01 AM on 10/28/2011
Here is something to think about. Where is all the money the Gaddafi's left with. I am sure it was hundreds of millions of dollars... So where did it go.
10:34 AM on 10/28/2011
By last account 200 billion in gold bullion, real estate and other assets worldwide.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dross Cool
09:10 AM on 10/28/2011
FIND THAT MURDERER
07:11 AM on 10/28/2011
What with the unending atrocities by NATO and its Libyan proxies being exposed it takes quite a nerve to prosecute any of the Qaddafi people for war crimes. It's plumbing new depths. Funny how the Libyan proxies seem to be able to videotape their own atrocities and not those imputed to Qaddafi.
08:16 AM on 10/28/2011
You have to be joking. The atrocities will end with this despot gone. At least this son did try to get his "Pops" to admit human rights abuses as a reformer. Dad should have listened.

Hardly a sanctioned videotape. A terrible cell phone recording. Ghaddafi's atrocities have benn documented for years.
08:41 AM on 10/28/2011
Have they? What atrocities? What verified and proven atrocities are you referring to, lets look at them one by one and test their integrity.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
05:26 AM on 11/12/2011
I am reasonably sure Gaddafi committed atrocities but so have just about all other African regimes, including the nefarious Robert Mugabe in Zimbabwe. 

This is how I view the Gaddafi case and the Nato intervention: it was PAYBACK for Gaddafi support for terrorism in the 1970s and 1980s. And that is fine with me, because regimes and individuals have to know that there is no statute of limitations on crimes against humanity. It is just that I am a little nonplussed by all the makeshift experts on Libya who seem to KNOW that the opposition will create a more just govt.

As for Saif al Islam, you got it right: he did try to reform the regime, but his father and other out-of-control political forces just overcame him. As such, I believe he is being so doggedly pursued, not for crimes against humanity, but as a way of quashing in future hopes for restoration of the Gaddafi family, which is also fine with me. But let's cut all the hyperbole about him being a war criminal!
08:21 AM on 10/28/2011
Obama, the enabler, owns this one.......for once he can't blame Bush.
10:36 AM on 10/28/2011
Yep, getting rid of a known terrorist who plotted and murdered 100s of Americans, while Bush made this mass murderer his buddy. Obama owns this one and the others Bush couldn't get.
06:56 AM on 10/28/2011
NATO made the best decision to get out of Libya. Unless all of Gadaffi family go on trial, we all know that this will be another long drawn out conflict and the New Libya and possibly the west, will find little peace. If NATO had stayed, it would soon be "boots on the ground" and america would have another enemy to add to its list of enemies.
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05:58 AM on 10/28/2011
Gaddafi son goes to Mali? What, all the hotels in Saudi Arabia booked up for the season????
05:42 AM on 10/28/2011
The international community can catch Gaddafi's son later, but right now the new government has to start rebuilding Libya, provide jobs for the Libyan unemployed, and deal what's left of the Libyan weapons that were left laying around and unguarded.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
02:30 AM on 10/28/2011
The people of Mali are grateful to the Gaddafi regime for its generosity to its and-Locked neighbor. Since Mali is the fourth poorest country in the world, the strategic investment­s that Libya made there have made a palpable difference in many people's lives. Unlike the Saudi's gaudi investment­s, what Libya did under the rubric of "pan-African development" was quite wise.... I'm not in Moammar Gaddafi's fan-club, but we need to understand that, despite the things he did Idiotically wrong, the things that he did right helped to keep him in power for over four decades and built a network of strong relationships across sub-Sahara­n Africa and beyond.

Basically, as long as these war-criminals are ensconced among the Tuareg, no nation or state can be held Accountable for their presence in the tents of the nomads. If I were managing this fugitive hunt, I'd be very careful. Saif is not his looney-tun­e father; Saif al-Islam is a very bright man with the potential to become a folk-hero throughout the region... That would be like letting the Sheriff of Nottingham pass himself off as Robin Hood. That would be a very unfortunate outcome.
02:16 AM on 10/28/2011
Now we know why these men that were helping Gaddafi were so black. Even Gaddafi's own followers would not fight for him anymore so he hired people from Niger and Mali to help his hopeless cause..Gaddafi must have offered them good money..Well they have no money now, when your dead.
01:50 AM on 10/28/2011
One can only imagine how many people these sons of Gaddafi killed in cold blood..They will get them. There days are numbered.
01:42 AM on 10/28/2011
Tomorrow's headline: Gadaffi Son Beheaded IN Mali
03:06 AM on 10/28/2011
that is the easy way out
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sieben13
10:43 PM on 10/27/2011
Send some drones
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
IzzyViolet
12:39 AM on 10/28/2011
How typical.
01:52 AM on 10/28/2011
Very typical. They should send 2!
09:14 PM on 10/27/2011
if kadafies family is loose, where will they get the money to live on now that he is dead. will they live in the grandure they lived in before.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
sieben13
10:45 PM on 10/27/2011
they probably have billions which they stole. Send them a DRONE
12:21 AM on 10/28/2011
And charge them for the cost of the drone. :)
10:04 PM on 10/27/2011
It’s not just that those who’ve yet to be prosecuted for the financial fraud that’s been comitted which brought the western worlds economies to their knees that’s in question, the flagrant miscarriage of justice reaches far beyond. We’ve still heard nothing from the international court in the Hague about the million plus Iraqi citizens the Bush group are responsible for murdering on false evidence which they created. I cannot see that anything the Gadhafi’s engaged even remotely comes close and yet the Hague has issued indictments. What about G.W. Bush, Cheney, Rumsfeld and Wolfowitz are they not subject to justice or are they for some reason immune? Indeed, the Occupy Wall Street Protesters are absolutely correct – “The entire system is totally corrupt which includes the western NATO alliance, and the UN.” Right before our eyes they’ve destroyed a nation, murdering upwards of fifty-thousand of its citizens, established a government responsive to their demands and the world looks on, excepting Russia, China and Venezuela, each seeking to be rewarded their share of the prize. What’s really changed during the past four hundred years?
10:49 PM on 10/27/2011
I completely agree and it is sooo obvious, so why are they getting away with it??
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
blueagle8u
12:21 AM on 10/28/2011
Because Republicans are ABOVE the law! lol
12:26 AM on 10/28/2011
Because they did nothing you guys claim they did. The got two authorizations from Congress, they used the UN resolutions and went in and defeated Saddams Military in weeks. Very few civilians were killed. The civil war that broke out afterwards was different, the Iraquis slaughtered themselves. Then we had the surge and brought it back under control and are leaving at the end of the year as Bush negotiated. The US did not kill civilians by the hundreds, certainly not the millions people like you claim.
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dfinch
It it's not broke don't fix it
11:59 PM on 10/27/2011
There was plenty of time for these weapons to have been moved to Syria or Iran.

http://www.defense.gov/news/newsarticle.aspx?id=15918
08:39 AM on 10/28/2011
I wouldn't have thought Iraq would do that. Iran and Syria were sworn deadly enemies of Iraq and in any case the whole region was being monitored by satellites of all sides. There were no WMD's in Iraq. The weapons inspector Scott Ritter and his people told the US and the UK this at the time
10:21 AM on 10/28/2011
There were no nuclear weapons in Iraq and neither does Iran have any. All the dribble tossed out by the various administrations since 1979 is nothing more than propaganda for U.S. citizens consumption. I aske you: "If I tossed you out of your home, placed you with someone of my choosing to manage your family and finances, opress your family, torture and rape the women, pleaded with your managers to bring it to a halt and they did nothing, what would you do... sit back and watch? This was the scenario that took place in Iran during 1954 arranged by the U.S, Britain and France. In 1979 Protester's, not unlike Occupy Wall Streeter's, stormed the U.S. Embassy and took its staff hostage. Saddam Hussein and Iraq was but another similar event adn we see them scattered all through Africa as well as the Middle East. These events are contained in information all over the Internet, all one has to do is take a pause from ball games or movies and educate themselves. As citizens we've let our Constitution down in a major way and as a result will shortly have no rights whatever, unless we stand with the Occupy Wall Streeter’s. We have a corrupt system of governance that has to be reeled in. We allowed it and it’s our duty to correct it
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
manroj1
Gamma Ray Burst
09:01 PM on 10/27/2011
I thought at first that the headline read: "Khadaffi's son flees to the mall".