Libyan commander wanted by ICC freed after protests

Libyan commander wanted by ICC freed after protests

by Joseph Anthony
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A Libyan commander wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) over a series of summary executions was released on Thursday, a day after handing himself in to military authorities in eastern Libya, a military source said.

Supporters of the commander, Mahmoud al-Werfalli, had demonstrated in the eastern city of Benghazi late on Wednesday against any legal action being taken against him, closing roads and burning tyres. Some held signs reading โ€œWe are all Major Mahmoud al-Werfalliโ€.

Werfalli is a commander in an elite unit attached to the Libyan National Army (LNA), the dominant force in eastern Libya. It rejects the internationally recognised government in Tripoli and is aligned with a separate government based in the east.

The ICC issued an arrest warrant for Werfalli last August accusing him of a role in the summary killings of 33 people between June 2016 and July 2017, as the LNA neared the completion of its campaign to take control of Benghazi.

The ICCโ€™s chief prosecutor reiterated her call for the LNAโ€™s top commander Khalifa Haftar to hand over Werfalli after a video purportedly showed him shooting dead 10 blindfolded prisoners at the site of a car bombing in Benghazi last month.

A military source said Werfalli had returned to Benghazi overnight โ€œafter the completion of investigative procedures concerning the case of the International Criminal Courtโ€. There was no official comment on his release.

By Thursday morning, the protests had subsided and roads in Benghazi had reopened.

LNA leader Haftar is a likely candidate in elections that the United Nations says it is hoping to hold by the end of the year in an effort to help unify Libya.

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