Car bomb defused outside luxury Libya hotel
Libyan security forces on Tuesday defused a dozen bombs that
had been placed inside a car that was parked outside a luxury hotel in the
capital, the interior ministry said.
The incident comes a week after another hotel in the capital
was thought to have been targeted by a rocket that missed and hit a nearby
apartment building.
Interior ministry spokesman Rami Kaal said the car, which
did not have any licence plates, had been parked outside the Radisson Hotel,
popular among foreign diplomats and business people.
Inside were 12 bombs linked by an electrical circuit and 10
seven-litre cans of petrol. The explosives, which had been set to be activated
from a distance, were defused.
Assailants have frequently attacked Western targets in Libya
since the fall of Moamer Kadhafi in a 2011 armed uprising backed by NATO air
power.
Most attacks have occurred in the east of the country, the
birthplace of the uprising, which is an Islamist stronghold.
On July 23, a rocket hit an apartment block in central
Tripoli but caused no casualties.
The building is located in a residential area between the
Corinthia Hotel and a tower that houses the British, Canadian and Maltese
embassies, as well as foreign companies.
Residents said the target of the attack was probably the
Corinthia.
Many Libyans blame political rivalries for the problems
plaguing a country awash with militias and weaponry left over from the 2011
revolution.
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