Umar Mihayshi

Umar Abdullah el Mihayshi (died 1984) was a Libyan of Circassian origin, an army officer and a member of the Libyan Revolutionary Command Council that ruled Libya after the coup d'état of 1 September 1969.

Life
Umar Mihayshi was member of the group of army officers called the Free Officers Movement that brought the royal regime in Libya down on 1 September 1969. He became a member of the twelve-member Libyan Revolutionary Command Council, headed by Muammar Gaddafi. He was promoted to the rank of Major after the revolution. After the establishment of the Libyan People's Court in October 1969, he represented the attorney-general at the court.

In August 1975, Gaddafi's regime announced that an attempted coup d'état had been forestalled. All thirteen leading conspirators were members of the Free Officers Movement and four of them (Umar Mihayshi, Bashir Houadi, Abdul Munim el Houni and Awad Hamza) were members of Revolutionary Council. By that time Mihayshi was already outside Libya. Between 1976 and 1983, he lived in Egypt, Tunisia and Morocco. While he was in Egypt, some sources said that Gaddafi's regime tried in vain to assassinate Mihayshi more than once.

In 1983, while Mihayshi was in Morocco, then under King Hassan II, the Moroccan authorities delivered Mihayshi to Gaddafi. Mihayshi was brutally murdered in January 1984 under torture by Sa'eed Rashid according to Abdel Rahman Shalgham, and which was published on Alhayat Newspaper in 16 July 2011.