South Africa Accused Of 'Silence' Over Murder Of Man In Libya
The Guardian|May 20, 2022
Anton Hammerl was killed in an incident in May 2011 during which other journalists, including James Foley - who was later kidnapped and beheaded by Islamic State in Syria were taken prisoner.
Peter Beaumont
South Africa Accused Of 'Silence' Over Murder Of Man In Libya

The widow of a British-based photographer who was murdered by Col Muammar Gaddafi's forces in Libya in 2011 has accused South Africa of withholding crucial information about her husband's death that could help in efforts to locate his body.

Anton Hammerl was killed in an incident in May 2011 during which other journalists, including James Foley - who was later kidnapped and beheaded by Islamic State in Syria were taken prisoner.

Penny Sukhraj-Hammerl found out on 19 May 2011 her husband was dead after 44 days of being led to believe that he was still alive in captivity along with other journalists.

The body of Hammerl - who was shot and left for dead in the desert has never been found despite a years-long campaign by his widow.

At issue are the circumstances of the return of Hammerl's passport to his widow by South Africa in 2016. Sukhraj-Hammerl believes that finding out how his passport came to be in South Africa may help his family find his body.

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