A court in southern Libya on Thursday reinstated Seif al-Islam Kadhafi, son of slain dictator Moamer Kadhafi, as a candidate in next month’s presidential election, Libyan media reported.
He had lodged an appeal earlier in the day at the court in Sebha against the electoral commission’s rejection of his application last month.
The commission had pointed to articles of the electoral law stipulating that candidates ‘must not have been sentenced for a dishonourable crime’ and must present a clean criminal record.
Western officials have talked up a United Nations-led peace process and insist on ‘inclusive’ and ‘credible’ elections starting on December 24 in the North African country, despite serious disputes over how they should be held, and their credibility.
Libya is seeking to move beyond a decade of violence that has rocked the oil-rich nation since a NATO-backed uprising that toppled and killed Kadhafi senior in 2011.
Read Also: Libyan Court Blocks Gen Haftar’s Presidential Bid
Seif al-Islam, who is wanted by the International Criminal Court for alleged war crimes, had registered to run on November 14 but was among 25 candidates whose bids have were rejected by the elections board last week.
It said the 25 had been rejected on legal grounds as well as information from officials including the public prosecutor, a police chief and the head of the passports and citizenship department.
Seif al-Islam had lodged an appeal in Sebha, but last week a ‘group of outlaws’ launched an ‘odious’ attack on the court, forcing it to shut hours before the appeal hearing, the government in Tripoli said.
Africa Today News, New York recalls that he was the first heavyweight candidate to sign up for the election, after emerging from years in the shadows and telling The New York Times in July that he was planning a political comeback.
AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK