Son of former Libyan ruler Gaddafi runs for president

Saif al-Islam, left, the son and one-time heir apparent of late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi registers his candidacy for the country’s presidential elections next month. (AP)
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Updated 15 November 2021
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Son of former Libyan ruler Gaddafi runs for president

  • Gaddafi is one of the most prominent figures expected to run for president
  • A major conference in Paris on Friday agreed to sanction any who disrupt or prevent the vote

TRIPOLI: Saif Al-Islam Gaddafi, son of Libya's former leader Muammar Gaddafi, registered on Sunday as a presidential candidate for the Dec. 24 election, an official from the electoral commission said.

Gaddafi is one of the most prominent figures expected to run for president - a list that also includes eastern military commander Khalifa Haftar, Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah and parliament speaker Aguila Saleh.
Photographs distributed on social media showed Gaddafi in traditional brown robe and turban, and with a grey beard and glasses, signing documents at the registration centre in the southern town of Sebha.
Despite the public backing of most Libyan factions and foreign powers for elections on Dec. 24, the vote is still in doubt as rival entities squabble over the rules and schedule.
A major conference in Paris on Friday agreed to sanction any who disrupt or prevent the vote, but there is still no agreement on rules to govern who should be able to run.
While Gaddafi is likely to play on nostalgia for the era before the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that swept his father from power and ushered in a decade of chaos and violence, analysts say he may not prove to be a front runner.
The Gaddafi era is still remembered by many Libyans as one of harsh autocracy, while Saif Al-Islam and other former regime figures have been out of power for so long they may find it difficult to mobilise as much support as major rivals.


UN official: 100,000 Lebanese in shelters after ‘unprecedented’ Israeli warnings

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UN official: 100,000 Lebanese in shelters after ‘unprecedented’ Israeli warnings

  • More than a million people were uprooted in Lebanon during a war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2024, 75%-80% of whom were not in shelters
BEIRUT: About 100,000 ‌people have fled to shelters in Lebanon and the number of displaced is expected to rapidly increase following “unprecedented” Israeli warnings ordering people out of large parts of the country, a senior UN official said on Friday.
With war raging between Israel and Lebanon’s Hezbollah, the Israeli military on Thursday ordered residents out of Beirut’s southern suburbs, including areas controlled by the Iran-backed group, as ‌well as parts ‌of the eastern Bekaa Valley, ‌after ordering ⁠people out of ⁠a swathe of south Lebanon on Wednesday.
“What we saw in the last couple of days is, I would say … unprecedented in terms of the scale here in Lebanon of the warnings, the displacement orders, and the ⁠reaction, the panic also, that this has ‌all created,” Imran ‌Riza, UN Humanitarian Coordinator in Lebanon, told Reuters.
“At the ‌moment, there are about 100,000 people that ‌are, as of this morning, in some 477 collective shelters. There are some 57 shelters that still have some space, but basically the capacity is being ‌reached very, very quickly,” Riza said.
Noting the panic and gridlock caused ⁠by the ⁠Israeli displacement orders, Riza said: “We had people moving all over the place and not knowing where to go to. So yes, I think we’re going to have an increased number quite quickly,” he said.
He noted that more than a million people were uprooted in Lebanon during a war between Hezbollah and Israel in 2024, 75-80 percent of whom were not in shelters. “This time again, the majority will not be in shelters probably,” he said.