Khaleej Times

Two killed as rival Libyan militias clash in Tripoli

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tripoli — Two people were killed and 29 others wounded in deadly clashes between rival Libyan militias in Tripoli sparked by the death of one of their leaders, the health ministry said on Friday.

Libya has been plagued by deadly unrest since Nato-backed rebels toppled the government of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

Libya’s new authoritie­s have pained to impose law and order as many of the ex-rebels have banded into militias and carved their own fiefdoms in a country awash with weapons looted from Gaddafi’s arsenal.

The latest fighting erupted following news that militia chief Nuri Friwan died on Thursday of injuries incurred at a checkpoint manned by a rival group in Soug Al Jomaa, in eastern Tripoli.

Witnesses and security officials said intense fire and explosions rocked several parts of the capital overnight and could be heard well into the early hours of Friday.

To avenge Friwan’s death, armed members of the Misrata militia drove to the Soug Al Jomaa district in vehicles equipped with anti-aircraft guns, blocking the main road to the area, witnesses said.

A health ministry spokesman said the fighting killed two people and wounded 29 others, but that most of those hurt had left hospital after receiving first aid.

Several buildings were hit by anti-aircraft fire during the fighting, including the 15-storey Radisson hotel which is used by diplomats and businessme­n.

An AFP correspond­ent saw the impact of bullets on the facade and windows that had been shattered.

A spokesman for the hotel said none of the guest or staff was hurt.

“The hotel’s security services told us to go down to the basement where we spent most of the night,” a representa­tive of an internatio­nal organisati­on caught in the crossfire said.

“And today it is as if nothing happened,” she said.

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