Saif Al-islam Gaddafi
Saif Al-islam Gaddafi was born in , Libya on June 25th, 1972 and is the Politician. At the age of 52, Saif Al-islam Gaddafi biography, profession, age, height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, measurements, education, career, dating/affair, family, news updates, and networth are available.
At 52 years old, Saif Al-islam Gaddafi physical status not available right now. We will update Saif Al-islam Gaddafi's height, weight, eye color, hair color, build, and measurements.
Dr.
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi (born 25 June 1972) is a Libyan political figure.
He is the second son of the former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and his second wife Safia Farkash.
He was a part of his father's inner circle, performing public relations and diplomatic roles on his behalf.
He publicly turned down his father's offer of the country's second highest post and held no official government position.
According to American State Department officials in Tripoli, during his father's reign, he was the second most widely recognized person in Libya, being at times the "de facto" Prime Minister, and was mentioned as a possible successor, though he rejected this.
An arrest warrant was issued for him on 27 June 2011 by the International Criminal Court (ICC) for charges of crimes against humanity against the Libyan people, for killing and persecuting civilians, under Articles 7(1)(a) and 7(1)(h) of the Rome statute.
He denied the charges.Gaddafi was captured in southern Libya by the Zintan militia on 19 November 2011, after the end of the Libyan Civil War, and flown by plane to Zintan.
He was sentenced to death on 28 July 2015 by a court in Tripoli for crimes during the civil war, in a widely criticised trial conducted in absentia.
He remained in the custody of the de facto independent authorities of Zintan.
On 10 June 2017, he was released from prison in Zintan, according to a statement from Abu Bakr al-Siddiq Battalion.
Later the same month, his full amnesty was declared by the Tobruk-based government led by Khalifa Haftar.
As of December 2019, Gaddafi remained wanted under his ICC arrest warrant for crimes against humanity.
Personal life
In 2006, the German newspaper Der Spiegel and the Spanish newspaper La Voz de Galicia reported that Saif al-Islam was romantically linked to Orly Weinerman, an Israeli actress and model, they dated from 2005 to 2011. At the time, Weinerman publicly denied having any contact with Saif al-Islam, but she has since admitted it, and in September 2012, she asked former British prime minister Tony Blair to intervene in his trial in order to spare his life.
In 2009, a party in Montenegro for his 37th birthday included well-known guests such as Oleg Deripaska, Peter Munk and Prince Albert of Monaco.
In April 2016, the Italian newspaper Corriere della Sera reported that Saif al-Islam had married in Zintan and had a three year old daughter. In his 2021 interview with The New York Times, Saif denied being married and claimed that he was lonely.
In the 2000s, Saif al-Islam was hosted at Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle by the British royal family. In 2009, he spent a weekend at Waddesdon Manor, home of financier Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild, where he was the guest of Lord Mandelson and Nathaniel Philip Rothschild. He later stayed at the Rothschild holiday home in Corfu. Nathaniel Rothschild was a guest at Saif's 37th birthday celebration in Montenegro.
Early life and career
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi graduated with a bachelor of science degree in engineering science from Tripoli's Al Fateh University in 1994. However, there is another report that claims he is an architect. In 2000, he earned an MBA from Vienna's Imadec business school.
There are two contradictory accounts of his mother's birth. According to one, Safia Farkash's mother is from a family from the Eastern Libyan Barasa tribe, and she was born in Bayda and trained as a nurse. The other is that she is of Hungarian origins.
The majority of the international Libyan art exhibition, "The Desert is Not Silent" (2002–2005), was primarily sponsored by a variety of multinational companies with direct links to his father's government, including ABB Group and Siemens.
The World Economic Forum named Gaddafi as the "Young Global Leader" in 2005.
Gaddafi was granted a PhD degree from the London School of Economics in 2008, where he obtained it during a string of casualties between the school and the Libyan political establishment. "The role of civil society in the democratization of global governance institutions" was emphasized by the author in a paper "from "soft power" to collective decision making." Meghnad Desai (London School of Economics) and Anthony McGrew (University of Southampton), among the LSE academics acknowledged in the paper as closely supporting with it were Nancy Cartwright, David Held and Alex Voorhoeve (the son of former Dutch Minister Joris Voorhoeve). Professor Joseph Nye of Harvard University has been praised for reading portions of the manuscript and giving suggestions and direction. Saif's dissertation was in several parts ghost-written by consultants from Monitor Group, which earned Muammar Gaddafi $30 million per year in fees.
Gaddafi said in Sabha on August 20 that he did not continue to participate in state affairs. He said he had previously "intervene[d] due to the absence of institutions, but that he could no longer do so. He denied any suggestion that this decision was due to a rift with his father, insisting that they were on good terms. He also called for political changes within the context of the Jamahiriya system, and denied the suggestion that he might replace his father, saying that "this is not a farm to inherit."
Gaddafi, the president of the Libyan National Association for Drugs and Narcotics Control (DNAG). He established the Gaddafi International Foundation for Charity Associations, which aided in several hostage situations involving Islamic militants and the resulting European Union-Libyan rapprochement in 1998.
Both Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch were allowed into Libya in 2009 in order to gather information about the human rights situation in Libya. Although AI and HRW expressed reservations about the "repressive environment," both felt there were signs of "change" and HRW said that one should not "understand the importance of Gaddafi's efforts in the field of human rights in Libya.
Gaddafi's charitable foundation "will no longer be involved in advocating human rights and political change" in the North African country, and that instead, it will concentrate on its "true charitable mission" of providing assistance and relief to sub-Saharan Africa.