BSS
  06 Feb 2026, 22:25

Thousands attend burial of slain son of Libya's Gaddafi

BANI WALID, Libya, Feb 6, 2026 (BSS/AFP) - Thousands turned out on Friday 
for the burial of the slain son of former Libyan ruler Muammar Gaddafi in a 
town that still holds allegiance to the late longtime leader.

Seif al-Islam Gaddafi, once seen by some as Libya's heir apparent, was shot 
dead in his home in the northwestern city of Zintan on Tuesday.

His burial in the town of Bani Walid, some 175 kilometres (110 miles) south 
of Tripoli, brought together thousands of Gaddafi loyalists, nearly 15 years 
after the ruler was toppled and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising.

Libya has struggled to recover from chaos that erupted since. It remains 
split between Prime Minister Abdelhamid Dbeibah's UN-backed government based 
in Tripoli and an eastern administration backed by Khalifa Haftar.

Dbeibah condemned the killing, saying that "assassinations never provide 
stability... but rather deepen division".

His interior ministry had announced that it would "ensure the security of the 
funeral" in the town of some 100,000 people.

Each year, Bani Walid celebrates the anniversary of a 1969 coup that brought 
Gaddafi to power, with people parading through the streets with portraits of 
the ex-leader and Libya's green flag from before the Arab Spring uprising.

Ahead of the burial on Friday, locals also carried those portraits and flags 
while chanting pro-Gaddafi slogans and declaring that "the martyrs' blood 
will not be shed in vain".

Marcel Ceccaldi, a French lawyer who had been representing Seif al-Islam, 
told AFP a "four-man commando" killed him.

Authorities said they were probing his death as the assailants remained at 
large.

Saadi Gaddafi, Seif al-Islam's younger brother, said his dead sibling would 
be buried "next to his brother Khamis Gaddafi", who was killed during the 
2011 unrest.

Under his father's iron-fisted 40-year rule, Seif al-Islam was described as 
the de facto prime minister, cultivating an image of moderation and reform 
despite holding no official position.

But that reputation soon collapsed when he promised "rivers of blood" in 
retaliation for the 2011 uprising.

He was arrested that year on a warrant issued by the International Criminal 
Court for alleged crimes against humanity, and a Tripoli court sentenced him 
to death, although he was later granted amnesty.

In 2021 he announced he would run for president but the elections were 
indefinitely postponed.