Ismail al-Salabi

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Ismail Mohammed al-Salabi (Arabic: سماعيل محمد الصلابي) is a Libyan citizen and Islamist militant leader who has deep rooted ties to the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood. He was the commander of the rebel forces in Benghazi under the 17 February Brigade.

Al-Salabi is 39 years old from the Barga suburb of Benghazi. He was arrested in 1997 by the Gaddafi administration for his participation in a Benghazi-based clandestine network that offered shelter for Islamist rebels, including ones that were linked to the al-Qaeda linked Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG). He was sentenced to 6 years in the Abu Salim prison, where he became an Islamist activist, and befriended the Belhadj brothers, one of whom was a jihadist that fought in Afghanistan and an LIFG commander before the 2011 civil war in Libya.[1] Prior to his political involvement, Salabi was a businessman, but after the outbreak of the Libyan Civil War, he became characterized for his role as a military commander of the Islamist rebel groups.[2][3]

Al-Salabi has strong familial links to the Muslim Brotherhood in Libya. His father, Mohammed al-Salabi was a founding member of the Muslim Brotherhood in Libya during the 1960s.[2] Salabi's brother, Ali al-Salabi, is regarded as one of the most prominent leaders and thinkers in the Libyan Muslim Brotherhood, as well as the overall Islamist movement in Libya.[4][5][6]

Beliefs

Leadership of Libyan rebels

References

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