Hannibal Gadhafi kidnapped: Son of late Libyan leader taken in Lebanon
Militants demanding information about Shia cleric who went missing in 1978
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The son of Libya's late leader Moammar Gadhafi was kidnapped in Lebanon by militants demanding information about the fate of a Shia cleric who went missing in Libya decades ago, a security official and local TV stations said Friday.
Hannibal Gadhafi appeared in a video aired late Friday on local Al-Jadeed TV saying anyone with information about Imam Moussa al-Sadr should come forward. Gadhafi appeared to have been beaten up and had black eyes but said in the video he is "in good health, happy and relaxed."
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Al-Sadr's 1978 disappearance has been a long-standing sore point in Lebanon. The imam's family believes he may still be alive in a Libyan prison, though most Lebanese presume al-Sadr is dead. Today he would be 87.
Al-Sadr was the founder of a Shia political and military group that took part in the long Lebanese civil war that began in 1975, largely pitting Muslims against Christians.
"I am with people who have a cause and they are loyal to their cause," Gadhafi, who is married to a Lebanese woman, said in the video. "We should respect their loyalty to their cause and at least give them the truth."
Al-Sadr was one of the pioneers of the Shia movement that has become a force across the Middle East, spurred by the 1979 Islamic revolution in Shia Iran.
Born in the Iranian holy city of Qom, al-Sadr came to Lebanon in 1959 to work for the rights of Shia in the southern port of Tyre. In 1974, a year before Lebanon's 15-year civil war broke out, al-Sadr founded the Movement of the Deprived, attracting thousands of followers.
The following year, he established the military wing Amal — Arabic for "hope" and an acronym for the militia's Arabic name, the Lebanese Resistance Brigades — which later fought in Lebanon's civil war.
Since al-Sadr's disappearance, Libya has maintained that the cleric and his two travelling companions left Tripoli in 1978 on a flight to Rome and suggested he was a victim of a power struggle among Shia.
I am with people who have a cause and they are loyal to their cause- Hannibal Gadhafi
Most of al-Sadr's followers are convinced Moammar Gadhafi ordered al-Sadr killed in a dispute over Libyan payments to Lebanese militias.
The Libyan leader was killed by opposition fighters in 2011, ending his four-decade rule of the north African country. Even after his death, al-Sadr's fate is still unknown.
Hannibal Gadhafi was arrested in 2008 for allegedly beating up two servants in a Geneva luxury hotel, sparking a diplomatic spat that dragged on for months. In 2005, a French court convicted him of striking a pregnant companion in a Paris hotel. He was given a four-month suspended prison sentence and a small fine.
He fled to Algeria after Tripoli fell, along with his mother and several other relatives.