No Result
View All Result
Saturday, December 6, 2025
23 °c
Tripoli
24 ° Sat
24 ° Sun
  • Advertising
  • Contact
LibyaHerald
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
SUBSCRIBE
  • Home
  • Libya
  • Business
  • Opinion
  • Magazine
  • Advertising
  • Login
  • Register
No Result
View All Result
LibyaHerald
No Result
View All Result
Home Libya

Baghdadi Al-Mahmoudi refutes allegations of torture in TV interview

byGeorge Grant
July 3, 2012
Reading Time: 3 mins read
A A
Baghdadi Al-Mahmoudi refutes allegations of torture in TV interview

Mahmoudi has refuted allegations that he has been mistreated since returning to Libyan custody

By George Grant and Ashraf Abdul Wahab.

Tripoli, 1 July:

Mahmoudi refuted allegations that he has been mistreated since being returned to Libyan custody

Baghdadi Al-Mahmoudi has claimed he is “in good health” and said that reports . . .[restrict]he has been mistreated in custody since his return to Libya last Sunday are “a lie”.

Qaddafi’s last prime minister made the remarks during a television interview with the Tunisian television station Al-Zitouna on Friday evening. The interview itself has been published on the station’s official Facebook page and can be viewed here.

Last Wednesday, allegations were made by Mahmoudi’s French lawyer, Marcel Ceccaldi, in the Guardian newspaper that his client had been badly beaten upon his return to Tripoli from Tunisia, where he had been held since September having fled there the previous month.

RELATED POSTS

Libya, Algeria and Tunisia agree on further cooperation on land transport

REAoL delegation participates in MeetMED Week 2024 in Tunisia

“People said to me he has broken ribs, he has perforated lung, and he fell into a coma,” Ceccaldi said. The lawyer, who was in Paris when he made the allegations, said he had been informed of Mahmoudi’s condition by hospital workers in Tripoli.

Three days earlier, Mahmoudi’s lawyer in Tunisia, Bashir Al-Said, had gone further still, claiming he may be dead. Al-Said also alleged Mahmoudi had been beaten on the back of the head and that he had been taken into intensive care.

Mahmoudi, who was evidently alive at the time of the recording, did not appear to have any head injuries, although the back of his head could not be seen during the interview.

Regarding Ceccaldi’s allegations, Mahmoudi appeared to have no difficulty in speaking, suggesting his lung had not been punctured. However, the camera never left Mahmoudi’s upper torso, making it impossible to verify the condition of his leg.

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) confirmed yesterday that it had still not been able to visit Mahmoudi in custody.

The overall tenor of the interview suggested Mahmoudi was clearly eager to please his audience, and a number of his remarks seemed less than credible.  “I congratulate the Libyan population for a successful revolution and I wish them the best of luck”, he said.

“The food here is better than the food in my house. I am eating here more than I used to eat in my house, and the medical care is more than excellent.”

Mahmoudi also claimed he was staying in a suite and that he had access to books as well as documentation relevant to the case against him.

Government spokesman Nasser Al-Manaa has previously called the allegations about Mahmoudi’s condition “a naked lie”.

Under Qaddafi, Mahmoudi was involved in the development of several Libyan infrastructure projects, including the Great Man Made River, which connected several of the country’s coastal towns with freshwater supplies deep in the Libyan desert.

He belatedly defected from the Qaddafi regime last August and fled to Tunisia.

Mahmoudi is now facing charges of ordering a mass rape in Zuara during the revolution, as well as ordering a hospital manager to transfer dead bodies to buildings hit by NATO airstrikes to infer that they had caused civilian casualties.

His extradition to Libya has sparked widespread international controversy, with rights groups including Amnesty International warning he would be at risk of torture.

The decision has also caused a major rift inside the Tunisian government, with Tunisia’s President Moncef Marzouki declaring the decision “illegal” and “a clear violation of our country’s international commitments and those towards the UN”.

The Tunisian government, which is led by Prime Minister Hamadi Jebali, has rejected the president’s allegations and said the decision to extradite Mahmoudi was made following a report by a Tunisian delegation to Tripoli, which found that the conditions for a fair judicial process had been met.

There has been some speculation on social networking sites that the video may have been recorded before Mahmoudi came to Libya, not least because Al-Zitouna is a Tunisian television channel.

This evening, a senior government official denied that the video was a fake. Ashur Al-Shamis, chief of staff to Prime Minister Abdurrahim Al-Kib, explained the decision to grant the interview to a Tunisian news channel was in response to the fact that the majority of speculation about Mahmoudi’s condition, as well as criticisms of the decision to extradite him, had come from Tunisia.

“There have been many rumours from Tunisia about Mahmoudi’s condition and claims that he had been mistreated in Libya”, Al-Shamis said. “That is why Al-Zitouna was permitted to interview him, to demonstrate the falsehood of these claims.”

Additional reporting by Abdul Razig Benali. 

  [/restrict]

Tags: Al-ZitounaCeccaldifeaturedGuardianLibyaMahmoudiTunisia

Related Posts

Nine deaths and 16 injured in Tajura state-recognised militia clashes
Libya

Overnight Zawia clashes end with civilian injuries and unconfirmed deaths

December 5, 2025
Interior Ministry’s Diplomatic Missions Protection personnel receiving training in Ukraine
Libya

Three million illegal immigrants in Libya, 75 % of whom are families, constitute ”settlement” which Libyans reject – illegally transfer US$ 7 billion annually: Interior Minister Trabelsi

December 4, 2025
EU to end Operation Sophia and to launch new Mediterranean operation to monitor UN Libya arms embargo
Libya

EU concludes Rome consultations with Libyan institutions on new migration and border management programme

December 4, 2025
Interior Ministry’s Diplomatic Missions Protection personnel receiving training in Ukraine
Libya

Libya’s National Programme for the Deportation of Illegal Immigrants: thousands repatriated with aim to repatriate 60,000 per month

December 3, 2025
ICC upholds admissibility of Saif Qaddafi’s trial
Libya

Libyan national Khaled El Hishri wanted for crimes against humanity and war crimes surrendered by Germany to the custody of the International Criminal Court  

December 2, 2025
Attorney General orders arrests at Jumhouria bank branch for embezzlement
Libya

Top Brega Oil Marketing Co. official detained in connection with smuggling of 22 million litres of subsidised diesel

December 2, 2025
Next Post
Pro-federalist protesters storm election offices in Tobruk and Benghazi

Pro-federalist protesters storm election offices in Tobruk and Benghazi

ICC team detained in Zintan to be released tomorrow

libyaherald-Ads

Top Stories

  • Former Tripoli Marriot hotel rebranded, upgraded and reopened as Al-Hayat Tower

    Former Tripoli Marriot hotel rebranded, upgraded and reopened as Al-Hayat Tower

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • AmCham Libya organizing Second AmCham Pavilion at Tripoli’s 2026 Libya Energy & Economic Summit (LEES)

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Libyan Ministry of Oil and Gas and Algeria’s Sonatrach discuss enhancing cooperation in the sector

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Libya needs over one million housing units over next 10 years costing over 200 billion dinars

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Three million illegal immigrants in Libya, 75 % of whom are families, constitute ”settlement” which Libyans reject – illegally transfer US$ 7 billion annually: Interior Minister Trabelsi

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
ADVERTISEMENT
LibyaHerald

The Libya Herald first appeared on 17 February 2012 – the first anniversary of the Libyan Revolution. Since then, it has become a favourite go-to source on news about Libya, for many in Libya and around the world, regularly attracting millions of hits.

Recent News

Overnight Zawia clashes end with civilian injuries and unconfirmed deaths

National Oil Corporation, Eni, BP, and Libyan Investment Authority consortium preparing to drill first deepwater exploratory well in Sirte Basin

Sitemap

  • Why subscribe?
  • Terms & Conditions
  • FAQs
  • Copyright & Intellectual Property Rights
  • Subscribe now

Newsletters

    Be the first to know latest important news & events directly to your inbox.

    Sending ...

    By signing up, I agree to our TOS and Privacy Policy.

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below

    Forgotten Password? Sign Up

    Create New Account!

    Fill the forms below to register

    *By registering into our website, you agree to the Terms & Conditions and Privacy Policy.
    All fields are required. Log In

    Retrieve your password

    Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

    Log In
    No Result
    View All Result
    • Login
    • Sign Up
    • Libya
    • Business
    • Advertising
    • About us
    • BusinessEye Magazine
    • Letters
    • Features
    • Why subscribe?
    • FAQs
    • Contact

    © 2022 LibyaHerald - Powered by Sparx Solutions.

    This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.