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Benghazi clashes leave at least 27 dead as protests grow over Libya's militias | |
(35 minutes later) | |
Clashes between protesters and militias aligned with the military in Libya's eastern city of Benghazi have left at least 27 people killed and dozens wounded, a health official said on Sunday. | |
The violence broke out on Saturday after protesters stormed a base belonging to Libya Shield, a grouping of militias with roots in the rebel groups that fought in the country's 2011 civil war. | The violence broke out on Saturday after protesters stormed a base belonging to Libya Shield, a grouping of militias with roots in the rebel groups that fought in the country's 2011 civil war. |
Protesters were demanding militias leave their camp and submit to the authority of Libya's security forces. The death toll is likely to increase public backlash against militias, which have been accused of acting with impunity, abusing citizens and enforcing their own agendas. | |
Benghazi saw anti-militia demonstrations after the attack last September that killed the US ambassador Chris Stevens and three other US citizens. But the Libyan security forces remain weak, and continue to rely on militia help. | |
Mohamed Belied, who is director at the city's al-Jala hospital, said the deaths were caused by gunshots and explosive fragments. Libyan officials have provided few details about the clashes. It remains unclear how many of the casualties were protesters and how many were members of the militias. Officials originally reported a total of seven dead. | |
The Libyan prime minister, Ali Zidan, in a statement issued early on Sunday, described the events in Benghazi as sad and painful and urged people to be cautious and exercise self-restraint. | |
Protesters demand that a checkpoint at the entrance of the city is removed and that members of Libya Shield leave the camp so the police and the army to take control of security, he said. | |
Full details would be announced when investigations were completed, Zidan added. "We have to find a solution to the weapons in the hands of people, so that such events would not happen again." | |
Colonel Ali al-Shikhi, an armed forces spokesman, said the armed forces had taken control of the situation inside the camp, including protecting heavy weapons stores. He added that the events were the result of "irregular co-ordination" between the people and the armed men in the camp, who are considered a reserve force for the Libyan army. | |
The fighting was the latest episode of lawlessness in Libya, which is going through a rocky transition after the overthrow of the Gaddafi regime in 2011. | |
Security remains elusive in the country, which is still awash with weapons from the war and prone to outbreaks of violence over private and political affairs. A feud led to clashes last week between tribes of African and Arab origins in southern Libya, leaving five people dead. | |
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