The government has denied South African media reports regarding the alleged escape by boat of South African mercenaries from Libya to Malta.
South African newspapers claimed today that mercenaries who had been helping Muammar Gaddafi and got trapped in Tripoli, escaped to Malta in three boats after bribing the boat owner.
The government said in a statement that there is no veracity in these claims and there has been no such unauthorised landing of persons from Libya.
The government also said there was no information regarding another report that a Gaddafi emissary came to Malta earlier this year and used the country to transfer funds from Libya to northern Ireland.
According to an ITV documentary, the emissary was said to have packed $2 million into a suitcase in Malta.
The South African media reported this morning that other South African mercenaries who allegedly took part in Muammar Gaddafi's failed escape bid are still taking care of his son Seif al-Islam.
The Beeld newspaper said South Africans were hired by a company with close ties to Gaddafi, training his presidential guard and handling some of his offshore financial dealings, the Afrikaans-language paper said.
South Africans have also reportedly been involved in transporting Gaddafi's gold, diamonds and foreign currency to Niger, and helping his wife and three of children flee Tripoli, the paper said.
Planes are waiting at a Johannesburg airport and in Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates to fly the South Africans out of Libya, the Beeld said.
The group of South Africans includes former soldiers and policemen. Some of them were killed one week ago in the attack on the convoy that left Gaddafi dead, it said.
"They are all seasoned operators abroad and apparently become involved only by invitation in operations for which they receive large sums in US dollars," it said.
Some of the South Africans were also in the group of mercenaries that staged a failed coup attempt in Equatorial Guinea in 2004, it added.
Rapport, at the weekend quoted one of the South Africans who claimed to be in the group as saying that their attempt to extract Gaddafi from Libya was a "huge failure".
Deon Odendaal, who described himself as a spy, said the group believed NATO wanted Gaddafi to leave Libya but the convoy came under attack as they tried to take him from his hometown in Sirte.
"It was a gruesome, gruesome orgy," Odendaal told the paper.
"The poor thing screamed like a pig," Odendaal said of Gaddafi 's final moments.