By SCM REPORTER I February 3, 2026
THE playboy son and heir-apparent to slain Libyan tyrant Muammar Gaddafi has been assassinated in a clinical gangland-style execution, according to reports.
Saif al-Islam Gaddafi was reportedly mowed down by a four-man hit squad while walking in his garden.
The gunmen—who struck with “military precision”—fled the scene immediately after the hit and remain at large.
Sources told Al Arabiya that the 53-year-old, once the London-educated “soft face” of the brutal Libyan regime, had no time to react as the assassins opened fire.
Early reports suggest the killers breached the perimeter of his residence before unleashing a hail of bullets.
The identity of the gunmen remains a mystery, sparking feverish speculation in Tripoli and beyond.
Whether the hit was carried out by political rivals, state actors, or vengeful remnants of the 2011 revolution, one thing is clear: the man who once thought he would inherit a desert empire died in the dirt.
Saif was long considered the most likely successor to his father, Muammar Gaddafi.
Studied at the LSE: He rubbed shoulders with the British elite and lived in a £10 million mansion in Hampstead.
Led the Defense: During the 2011 Arab Spring, he traded his designer suits for combat fatigues, vowing to fight “until the last bullet.”
Became a Ghost: After his father was killed in a drainage pipe in 2011, Saif was captured by rebels, sentenced to death, then later released into a shadowy existence of legal limbo and failed political comebacks.
The Gaddafi Bloodline
His death marks the end of an era for the Gaddafi clan.
While Saif had recently attempted a political “phoenix” act—aiming to run for the Libyan presidency—his path was always blocked by a legacy of blood and a standing warrant from the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity.
The “Prince of Tripoli” spent years trying to scrub the stains of his father’s 42-year dictatorship. In the end, his father’s violent legacy caught up with him in the one place he felt safe.

