The long, dramatic detention of Hannibal Gaddafi in Lebanon is finally nearing its end. For nearly a decade, the son of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had been held without trial.
His alleged crime: withholding information about the fate of the revered Lebanese Shi’ite cleric, Imam Musa al-Sadr.
Al-Sadr vanished during a 1978 trip to Libya. Hannibal, the youngest son of the former ruler, was just two years old at the time.
The Price of Freedom Drops
The breakthrough came suddenly on Thursday, just days after a Libyan delegation visited Lebanon. The country’s judicial authorities decided to remove the travel restrictions placed on Gaddafi. Furthermore, they slashed his substantial bail requirement.
This decision reversed an earlier ruling in October. At that time, a Lebanese judge had ordered his release on a hefty $11 million bail, but kept a strict ban on him leaving Lebanon. His legal team quickly argued he lacked the funds to pay the amount. They urgently requested permission for him to leave the country.
The original bail amount was dramatically reduced to approximately $900,000. Once this payment is finalized, he will be permitted to depart Lebanon. Judicial officials confirmed that Gaddafi has already made plans to exit the country, with his family scheduled to follow him later.
Protest and Political History
The fate of the missing cleric remains a painful, open wound in Lebanon. Al-Sadr’s family holds onto the hope that he might still be alive in a Libyan prison, although most Lebanese assume the cleric, who would be 96 today, is deceased. Al-Sadr was the founder of a Shiite political and military group that was active during the Lebanese civil war.
Libya had formally requested Gaddafi’s freedom back in 2023. At that time, they cited his rapidly deteriorating health. Gaddafi had resorted to a hunger strike to protest his prolonged detention without formal charges.
The entire episode began when he was abducted in 2015 and forcibly brought to Lebanon. He had been living in self-imposed exile in Syria with his Lebanese wife and children.