(Reuters) -
Heavily armed gunmen stormed Libya's parliament with anti-aircraft
weapons on Sunday in an assault claimed by forces loyal to a renegade
ex-general who has vowed to purge the country of Islamist militants. In a confusing,
chaotic attack, heavy smoke rose from the parliament building in Tripoli
as gunmen clashed with guards. A Reuters reporter said the attackers
raided and left, and other unknown gunmen later closed off nearby
streets. Another witness
said attackers had kidnapped two people and heavy gunfire could be heard
across other parts of Tripoli, where rival brigades of former rebels
have often clashed since ending their 2011 war against Muammar Gaddafi. Details
of who carried out the parliament attack were unclear, but a spokesman
for retired Libyan general Khalifa Haftar said his forces had carried
out the assault as part of his campaign to rid Libya of Islamist militants. "These
are members of the Libyan National Army," Mohamed al-Hejazi, spokesman
for the group said, using the name of the irregular forces loyal to
Haftar. Haftar, a former
rebel in the war against Gaddafi, had already sent his fighters into
Benghazi on Friday against Islamist militants based there, claiming
Libya's government had failed to halt violence in the eastern city. At least 40 people were killed in those clashes, which involved some air force helicopters. On
Saturday, parliamentary speaker and military commander-in-chief Nuri
Abu Sahmain accused Haftar of trying to stage a coup. Several reports
said Sahmain had been kidnapped after Sunday's attack, but he denied
that. ARMED BRIGADES After
the 2011 NATO-backed war, Libya's weak government and nascent army
struggled to impose any authority over heavily armed brigades and
militias who once fought Gaddafi and have become powerbrokers often
challenging the state. Libya's
parliament has been paralyzed by divisions between Islamist parties and
more nationalist rivals, leaving many Libyans frustrated at the lack of
progress toward democratic transition since the fall of Gaddafi. Militia
brigades in armored trucks mounted with anti-aircraft canons have often
stormed parliament, occupied ministries and even kidnapped the prime
minister last year in a show of military muscle to make political
demands. But Sunday's
attack on parliament was the most serious violence in the capital for
months, and appeared to expand Haftar's campaign against hardline
Islamists, who emerged as a force in North Africa since the Arab Spring
revolts of 2011. Lawmaker
Omar Bushah told Reuters that gunmen had stormed into the General
National Congress building, raiding lawmakers' offices and set the
building on fire. There were no immediate reports of any casualties from hospital officials. COUP RUMOURS Haftar
stirred rumors of a coup in February by appearing in a Libyan military
uniform to call for a presidential committee to be formed to govern
until new elections as a way to end the country's political impasse. It
was unclear how much support Haftar has in the regular armed forces or
among the network of competing militias who have carved out fiefdoms in
parts of the country. But
in Benghazi, the cradle of the uprising against Gaddafi, authorities
have struggled to curb violence and stem attacks blamed on Ansar
al-Sharia, an Islamist group that Washington labels as a terrorist
organization. Since the
end of Gaddafi's one-man rule, Libya's fragile democracy has hobbled
from crisis to crisis with the country on its third prime minister since
March, its new constitution unwritten and parliament deadlocked by
infighting. Just hours
before the attack, new Prime Minister Ahmed Maiteeq announced he had
formed a government pending parliamentary approval this week, after the
country went nearly two months without a functioning government. Complicating
Libya's transition, the most powerful brigades of former rebels -- such
as the Zintans, the Misratans and the Operations Room of Libya's
Revolutionaries -- have loosely allied themselves competing political
factions. Former rebel
commanders and protesters have also taken over key oil ports and
pipelines, cutting Libya's oil output to 200,000 barrels per day from
1.4 million bpd to demand more autonomy and a greater share of oil
wealth.
Gunmen storm Libyan parliament, clashes in Tripoli
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.