ICC staff members released in Libya

ICC staff members released in Libya

PanARMENIAN.Net - Four staff members from the International Criminal Court (ICC) held in Libya for four weeks on suspicion of spying have been released, according to BBC News.

The announcement came during a visit to Libya by ICC president Sang-Hyun Song.

The team had been accused of spying during a visit to Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, son of the deposed Libyan leader, in the town of Zintan.

A senior member of the Libyan attorney-general's office confirmed to the BBC that the four would be leaving Libya.

"They are due to face the courts here in Tripoli for the final ruling" on 23 July, the source said. "We expect them to come back for the hearing but if they don't, a ruling will be made in absentia," the source added.

Mr Song offered an apology to the Libyan authorities for the "difficulties" caused by the mission.

In a news conference organized in Zintan, Mr Song also thanked the Libyan authorities for arranging the "release of the four ICC staff to be re-united with their families".

The ICC employees had been accused of jeopardizing Libya's national security.

One of the four, Australian lawyer Melinda Taylor, was accused of passing Saif al-Islam coded documents, allegedly written by his former right-hand man, during the team's visit. Ms Taylor and her Lebanese colleague Helene Assaf, a translator, were then formally detained.

Their two other colleagues, Russian Alexander Khodakov and Spaniard Esteban Peralta Losilla, remained with them out of solidarity.

Last week, the ICC promised in a statement to investigate any claims of wrongdoing by its staff upon their release and to impose "appropriate sanctions" if necessary.

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