BEIRUT:
Imam Musa Sadr – who went missing during a visit to Libya in 1978 – died 20
years later in a prison in Tripoli, a source from the Libyan National
Transitional Council has revealed.
“Imam
Musa Sadr died in his prison cell where he was being held since his
disappearance at the hands of [security] members of the Gadhafi regime in
1978,” the source told local Al-Liwaa newspaper in an interview published
Tuesday.
The
source said Sadr died from natural causes in the summer of 1998. He was being
detained in an underground cell at Tripoli’s central prison, the source added.
His
body was kept at the prison’s morgue until the early days of the outbreak of
the Libyan revolution, according to the source.
Sadr,
the founder of Amal Movement, now headed by Parliament Speaker Nabih Berri,
went missing during a visit to Libya on Aug. 31, 1978, along with his two
companions – Sheikh Mohammad Yacoub and journalist Abbas Badreddine.
In
response to a question about the whereabouts of Sadr’s body, the source said
initial investigation conducted by the Libyan interim national council showed
that the corpse may have been taken out of the morgue by Gadhafi’s forces to
“cover up the crime.”
According
to some evidence and accounts of a number of witnesses, the source said Sadr’s
body is likely buried in a mass grave that had been recently discovered in a
Tripoli suburb.
The Libyan source said the
Council has no clue on the whereabouts of Sadr’s two companions.
http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Politics/2011/Dec-27/158050-sadr-died-in-libya-jail-kept-12-years-in-morgue-report.ashx#axzz1kkzRRrWi
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