Lebanese court charges Gaddafi A Lebanese prosecutor has charged Muammar Gaddafi, Libya's president, and six other Libyan officials with the disappearance of Imam Moussa al-Sadr, a top Lebanese Shia cleric 30 years ago, judicial officials in Beirut said.
Prosecutor Samih al-Haj charged Gaddafi on Wednesday with "incitement to kidnap and withhold the freedom" of the imam and his companions, the officials said.
Under Lebanese law, the charges carry between seven years and life imprisonment, and possibly even a death sentence.
Arrest warrants have also been issued for Gaddafi and the other six Libyans charged, the Lebanese officials said.
They spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to talk to the media.
The case has been a long-standing sore issue in Lebanon, where authorities blame Gaddafi and his aides for the disappearance of Imam Moussa al-Sadr and the imam's two companions during a trip to Libya in 1978.
Power struggle
Libya insists that al-Sadr and the two aides left its territory on a flight to Rome at the end of the visit and suggests the imam was a victim of an inter-Shia power struggle.
Despite a widely held belief in Lebanon that the three Shias were killed after a dispute with Gaddafi, the al-Sadr family strongly believes the imam is alive and remains in a Libyan jail.
But the judicial officials, acknowledged that the move is largely symbolic because it's unlikely Gaddafi would come to stand trial in Lebanon.
Initially, the officials only said the Lebanese judge was seeking a death sentence for Gaddafi, but clarified that the charges have been raised.
In 2004, relatives of al-Sadr and his companions filed a complaint with Lebanese judicial authorities against Gaddafi and 17 other Libyan officials.
That year, Lebanon's prosecutor-general ordered Gaddafi summoned for questioning about the al-Sadr case.
The Libyan leader never responded to the summons or showed up in Lebanon.
Gaddafi has also never officially visited Lebanon since al-Sadr's disappearance.
Source:
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/africa/2008/08/200882801533195505.html