Politics
Gadhafi son Saif at hotel after arrest report
Updated: 2011-08-23 10:19
(Agencies)
TRIPOLI - Saif al-Islam, the son of Libyan leader Muammar Gadhafi who rebels and the International Criminal Court said had been arrested, arrived late on Monday at the Tripoli hotel where foreign reporters are staying.
Saif appeared at the Rixos Hotel late at night and spoke to foreign journalists there.
Television footage showed him pumping his fists in the air, smiling, waving and shaking hands with supporters outside the hotel, as well as holding his arms aloft with each hand making the V for victory sign.
Saif told journalists that Libya, which has been largely overrun in the past 24 hours by rebel forces seeking to topple his father, was in fact in government hands and that Muammar Gadhafi was safe.
Earlier, armed pro-Gadhafi security mean guarding the hotel took a small group of journalists to Gadhafi's Bab al Aziziyah compound, where they had a meeting with Saif.
They returned to the hotel accompanied by Saif, who then spoke to journalists in the lobby before taking some of them back to the compound a short distance away for a brief visit.
Saif said: "I am here to disperse the rumours ...
"This is a war of technology and electronics to cause chaos and terror in Libya. They also brought in armed gangs by sea and by road."
He was referring to a text message sent to mobile phone subscribers in Tripoli on Monday congratulating them on the fall of Muammar Gadhafi.
Saif also said that Tripoli was under government control and that he did not care about an arrest warrant issued by the International Criminal Court in The Hague seeking him and his father for crimes against humanity.
When asked if his father was safe and well in Tripoli, Saif told a journalist: "Of course."
E-paper
Blue economy gets a lift
Coastal areas of Shandong, Zhejiang and Guangdong to spearhead sector development.
The light touch
Long way to go
Outdoor success
Specials
Star journalist remembered
Friends, colleagues attended a memorial service to pay tribute to veteran reporter Li Xing in US.
Hot pots
Tea-making treasures catch the fancy of connoisseurs as record prices brew up interest
Hear we go
Polish Audiologist helps thousands of Chinese hear for the first time.