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Seif al-Islam, son of Libya's late dictator Moamer Kadhafi, stands trial on May 2. Photo/AFP

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Seif al-Islam appears in court in Libya’s Zintan

Seif al-Islam, son of Libya's late dictator Moamer Kadhafi, stands trial on May 2. Photo/AFP

Seif al-Islam, son of Libya’s late dictator Moamer Kadhafi, stands trial on May 2. Photo/AFP

ZINTAN, Libya, May 2 – Seif al-Islam, the detained son of Libya’s late dictator Moammar Gaddafi, appeared in court Thursday charged with illegally trying to communicate with the outside world last June, an AFP journalist reported.

The man once assumed to be his father’s heir appeared in good health, wearing blue clothes, at the hearing in the western town of Zintan.

Seated behind a grille and with two masked policemen at his sides, the defendant was relaxed and smiling but appeared to have lost a tooth.

Two lawyers, one named by the court and the other, Mabrouka Jumaa, who was chosen by his aunt, represented Seif as he faced the charge of “undermining state security” for meeting four envoys from the International Criminal Court last June.

The charges were levelled against Seif after the ICC team met him in Zintan and were themselves detained for nearly a month, triggering a diplomatic row with The Hague-based court. They were finally allowed to return home in July.

The judges decided to adjourn Thursday’s trial until September 19 at the request of the defence team, who wanted access to the whole file on the case.

When journalists seated near the grille asked if he was well, Seif replied “yes”, and gave a thumbs up.

Mohamed Allagui, head of the national council of liberties and human rights, said at a press conference after the hearing that Seif was being “held in good conditions in line with international standards.”

The defendant did not reply when the judge asked if he accepted the two lawyers assigned to him, but did say that he had no further requests when asked.

The judge also called the four ICC employees, who face the same charges as Seif, but they were absent from the hearing.

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The four included Australian lawyer Melinda Taylor who was accused of carrying a pen camera and attempting to give Seif a coded letter from his former right-hand man Mohammed Ismail, who is wanted by Libyan authorities.

In January after a first hearing, ICC lawyers slammed the charges, saying that Seif was “essentially being tried for attempting to communicate with the ICC via his Counsel in relation to the fact that his rights had been violated”.

The ICC, which was mandated by the UN Security Council to investigate the Libyan conflict, issued an arrest warrant in June 2011 for Seif, but clashed with Tripoli over where he should be tried after he was captured by anti-Kadhafi fighters near Zintan in November 2011.

Only press reporters were admitted to the courtroom on Thursday, and Libyan national television was allowed to film the hearing.

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