Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the son of Libya’s former leader Col Muammar Gaddafi, has reportedly been shot dead, according to Libyan media reports.
The death of the 53-year-old, once widely viewed as his father’s heir apparent, was confirmed on Tuesday by the head of his political team, the Libyan News Agency reported.
However, details surrounding the circumstances of his death remain unclear, with conflicting accounts emerging.
His lawyer told the AFP news agency that Saif al-Islam was assassinated at his home in the city of Zintan by a “four-man commando” unit, although it was not immediately known who carried out the attack or what their motive may have been.
In a separate account, his sister told Libyan television that Saif al-Islam died near Libya’s border with Algeria, further adding to the uncertainty surrounding the incident.
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was long regarded as one of the most powerful and feared figures in Libya after his father, who ruled the country from 1969 until he was ousted and killed during the 2011 uprising.
Born in 1972, he played a central role in Libya’s efforts to re-engage with Western countries from around 2000, helping shape policy during a period that saw sanctions lifted and relations thawed following Libya’s decision to abandon its nuclear weapons programme.
Despite holding no formal government position, Saif al-Islam was heavily involved in high-level negotiations and policymaking, leading some observers to view him as the reformist face of the Gaddafi regime.
Following the collapse of his father’s rule, Saif al-Islam was accused of playing a key role in the violent crackdown on anti-government protests in 2011. He was captured and held for nearly six years by a militia in Zintan.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) sought his arrest to face charges of crimes against humanity linked to the suppression of protests.
In 2015, a court in Tripoli, under the UN-backed government in western Libya, sentenced him to death in absentia.
However, he was later released by a militia in Tobruk, in eastern Libya, under an amnesty law two years later.
Since the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi, Libya has remained deeply divided, with the country split among rival militias and two competing governments.
Although Saif al-Islam repeatedly denied ambitions to succeed his father, once saying that power was “not a farm to inherit,” he re-emerged politically in 2021, announcing plans to run for the presidency. The elections were later postponed indefinitely.
Authorities are yet to issue an official statement clarifying the circumstances of his reported death.
