Libya on Monday freed four envoys of the
International Criminal Court who were detained after visiting the son
of slain leader Moamer Kadhafi last month, a brigade commander and an
official said.
“The four members (of the ICC team) were
released,” Ajmi al-Atiri, commander of a brigade holding Seif al-Islam
Kadhafi told journalists in Zintan, a hilltop town southwest of Tripoli.
The four, including Australian lawyer
Melinda Taylor, have been held in Zintan since June 7 after travelling
there to help prepare Seif al-Islam’s defense.
Taylor was accused of carrying a pen
camera and attempting to give Seif al-Islam a coded letter fromhis
former right-hand man, Mohammed Ismail, who is wanted by the Libyan
authorities.
Libya accused the team of “breaching
national security.” Libyan Deputy Foreign Minister Mohammed Abdelaziz
said the release was the result of an agreement between his country and
the ICC, which committed to continue investigations and keep Libya in
the loop of its findings.
He added that the “four ICC envoys will leave Libya later in the day.”
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