Get news alerts Login Central AfricaEast AfricaHorn of AfricaIndian OceanNorth AfricaSouthern AfricaWest AfricaAfrica / World Agriculture - NutritionCulture - ArtsEconomy - DevelopmentEnvironment - NatureGay - LesbianGender - WomenHealthHuman rightsLabourMediaPoliticsScience - EducationSocietyTechnologyTravel - Leisure From Behind By Country By Topic Chronological Press Releases Partner Media Contact Us
   
 


See also:
» 01.02.2011 - Ghaddafi siblings prepare for Libya unrest
» 18.03.2010 - Nigeria Senate leader calls Gaddafi "mad man"
» 16.03.2010 - Gaddafi: "Split Nigeria into two nations"
» 16.12.2009 - Lockerbie bomber disappears in Libya
» 02.12.2009 - Swiss nationals get jail terms in Libya
» 25.11.2009 - Gaddafi to mediate Algeria-Egypt row
» 23.11.2009 - Libya and FAO sign $71 million development deal
» 13.11.2009 - Tuareg rebels repatriated to Niger








Libya | Nigeria
Politics | Society

Court overturns Swiss man’s jail term

afrol News, 1 February - An appeals court in Libya has overturned a conviction of a Swiss businessman, Rachid Hamdani, one of the two Swiss men being held in Libya on immigration violations.

Mr Hamdani and Max Goldi were sentenced to 16 months in prison in November for staying illegally in Libya. Mr Goldi is expected to appear in court on Thursday to appeal the same charges laid against him by the Libyan authorities.

Analysts have said the men were Entangled in a row over Bern's treatment of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi's son Hannibal and pregnant wife in 2008 for allegedly assaulting their servants at a hotel in Geneva.

They have been holed up for almost the past year and a half at the Swiss embassy in Tripoli since the Hannibal affair blew up in July 2008, and the pair also face trial on charges of suspected illegal business activities.

Tripoli initially denied the Swiss businessmen exit visas and charged them with the immigration offences. However, they were later released on bail and allowed to stay at the embassy.

The businessmen had been due to return to Switzerland last September, but two days before their release, the daily newspaper La Tribune de Geneve printed pictures of Hannibal Kadhafi looking messy while in police custody.

In 2005, Hannibal was detained in Paris for allegedly assaulting his companion in a hotel. On several occasion, the police had also stopped him for over speeding at Avenue des Champs-Élysées, known in France as the most beautiful avenue in the world.

The arrest of Mr Gaddafi sparked a political row with the Swiss government with Tripoli closing some of the Swiss companies and throwing diplomats out of the country.

Switzerland's foreign ministry said authorities acted within international law in the arrest, but admitted that local police could have acted in a more sensitive manner especially to a highly pregnant wife.


- Create an e-mail alert for Libya news
- Create an e-mail alert for Nigeria news
- Create an e-mail alert for Politics news
- Create an e-mail alert for Society news

    E-mail this to a friend     Printable version

Related pages and feature
Current afrol News Top Stories
Libya
Nigeria
Politics
Society
Affairs
Diaspora
Diplomacy
Law
People
» Egypt banks reopen as protests continue
» Morocco protests planned for 20 February
» Cape Verde elects new parliament today
» Tunisia govt improves rights situation
» Change of momentum in Egypt
» Run-off vote to be held in Niger
» Bozizé re-election in CAR contested
» Live studio: Friday protest in Egypt
» "Algeria soon to lift state of emergency"
» Algeria prepares protests despite govt threats


top of page about afrol News | news | countries | archive | services | feed back | español 

© afrol News. Reproducing or buying afrol News' articles.

   You can contact us at mail@afrol.com