The 53-year-old was shot at close range after a team of masked gunmen stormed his home in the town southwest of Tripoli. The attackers reportedly disabled security cameras before carrying out the assassination.
Khaled al-Zaidi, Gaddafi's lawyer, and Abdulla Othman, his political adviser, confirmed his death on February 4. No group has yet claimed responsibility for the killing.
A Complex Legacy
Born in Tripoli in June 1972, Saif al-Islam was widely viewed as his father's heir apparent during the elder Gaddafi's decades-long rule. Western-educated and articulate, he initially projected an image as a reformer and modernizer within the regime.
However, when protests erupted against his father's government in 2011 as part of the Arab Spring, Saif al-Islam abandoned his reformist persona and backed the violent suppression of demonstrators. The uprising evolved into a civil war that culminated in Muammar Gaddafi's capture and death in October 2011.
Following the regime's collapse, Saif al-Islam spent years in detention in Zintan. He was released from custody and had recently attempted a return to Libyan politics, registering as a presidential candidate in 2021, though elections were repeatedly postponed.
The Gaddafi Family's Fate
Saif al-Islam's death marks another violent chapter in the Gaddafi family's story. Three of his brothers—Mutassim, Saif al-Arab, and Khamis—were killed during the 2011 revolution. Another brother, Al-Saadi, was released from prison in 2021 and left Libya. Two other brothers, Muhammad and Hannibal, survived the conflict.
The assassination raises fresh questions about Libya's fragile security situation and the ongoing struggle for power in the oil-rich North African nation, which has remained politically divided since the 2011 uprising.
TRIPOLI, Libya — Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, the most prominent surviving son of former Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi, was killed in a targeted attack at his residence in Zintan on February 3, 2026, according to his lawyer and political adviser.