Four suspected French spy on behalf of Muammar Gaddafi were released and returned, Saturday, May 21, Egypt announced the French Foreign Ministry in a statement. They were supported by the French consular authorities. These four employees Secopex, a private security company, were detained following the death of their boss on May 11 in Benghazi.
The rebellion Jamahiriya announced Friday the expulsion of the next four French. "The Libyan justice (rebel) did not intend to judge," had said a Libyan source close to the matter, adding: "We want to expel them and they never come back. The important thing was to prevent harm ". The four men work for Secopex, a private security company based in Carcassonne.
Their boss, the former paratrooper sergeant of marines Pierre Marziali, was killed during arrest, which occurred as they left a restaurant, after Secopex. According to rebel sources and European diplomatic sources, the former French military rebellion spying "on behalf of Colonel Gaddafi." According to Jamal Bennour, the Attorney General in Benghazi, some of them had visited before coming to Tripoli BenghaziDans an interview with French daily Liberation, the Vice-President Secopex Robert Dulas, acknowledged that the company had had contact with the regime in Tripoli but Gaddafi denied the charges of espionage, ensuring that the French authorities and the rebels were aware of the Secopex activities in Libya.
The rebellion Jamahiriya announced Friday the expulsion of the next four French. "The Libyan justice (rebel) did not intend to judge," had said a Libyan source close to the matter, adding: "We want to expel them and they never come back. The important thing was to prevent harm ". The four men work for Secopex, a private security company based in Carcassonne.
Their boss, the former paratrooper sergeant of marines Pierre Marziali, was killed during arrest, which occurred as they left a restaurant, after Secopex. According to rebel sources and European diplomatic sources, the former French military rebellion spying "on behalf of Colonel Gaddafi." According to Jamal Bennour, the Attorney General in Benghazi, some of them had visited before coming to Tripoli BenghaziDans an interview with French daily Liberation, the Vice-President Secopex Robert Dulas, acknowledged that the company had had contact with the regime in Tripoli but Gaddafi denied the charges of espionage, ensuring that the French authorities and the rebels were aware of the Secopex activities in Libya.
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