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Photographer: Mahmud Turkia/AFP via Getty Images Photographer: Mahmud Turkia/AFP via Getty Images

Benghazi, Libya (AP) -- Seif al-Islam, the son and one-time heir apparent of late Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi, has been released after more than five years in detention, his captors said on Saturday.

A statement by his captors, the Abu Bakr al-Siddiq Battalion, said Seif al-Islam was released a day earlier, but gave no details on his whereabouts. Battalion officials reached by The Associated Press at Zintan, a town south of the capital Tripoli where it is based, confirmed his release. They declined to disclose his whereabouts, citing concerns over his safety.

They said his release was decided as part of a recent pardon issued by the Libyan parliament based in the country's eastern region.

Abdallah Bilhaq, a spokesman for the Tobruk-based Libyan House of Representatives, said "the amnesty law had to be issued" to help move on from the chaos that has engulfed the country in recent years.

"As for the news of the release of Seif al-Islam Gadhafi, he is a Libyan citizen covered by the amnesty law," Bilhaq said, but added that the law did not exempt anyone from criminal charges they may face.

The parliament in the city of Tobruk is part of one of three rival administrations in Libya, evidence of the chaos that has prevailed in the country since Gadhafi's ouster and death.

Gadhafi's son was captured by the battalion's fighters late in 2011, the year when a popular uprising toppled Gadhafi after more than 40 years in power. He was later killed.

The uprising later plunged the oil-rich North African nation into a ruinous civil war in which Seif al-Islam led Gadhafi's loyalist forces against the rebels.

Human Rights Watch said that despite Seif al-Islam's reported release he is still wanted on charges of crimes against humanity related to the 2011 uprising.

"Libyan authorities, who remain obligated to surrender him to the court, should urgently confirm whether he was released and disclose his current whereabouts," the group's Middle East director, Sarah Leah Whitson said in a statement.