Libya PM's home attacked as US deploys marines



TRIPOLI- Gunmen attacked the home of Libya's new premier Tuesday, as increasing security fears prompted Washington to order marines to deploy off the coast in case its embassy needs to be evacuated.
Meanwhile, jihadist group Ansar al-Sharia, targeted by an ex-general who says the country has become a "terrorist hub," has called on Libyans to repudiate him.



Businessman Ahmed Miitig, 42, was elected prime minister this month in a chaotic vote by the General National Congress (GNC) to replace Abdullah al-Thani, who resigned in April after claiming he and his family had been attacked.
An aide to Miitig said "there was an attack with rockets and small arms on the prime minister's house" in Tripoli at 3:00 am (0100 GMT).
The premier and his family were in the house at the time, but escaped unharmed.
His guards opened fire on the group, wounding and arresting two of them, the official added.
- '1,000 marines' -
In Washington, a defence official said the United States was deploying an amphibious assault ship with about 1,000 marines off the Libyan coast in case the US embassy needs to be evacuated.
The USS Bataan is to be in the area "in a matter of days" in what was described as a "precautionary" measure in case conditions in Libya worsen.
The step comes amid ongoing controversy at home over a September 2012 attack on the US consulate in Benghazi in which Ambassador Christopher Stevens and three other Americans were killed.
In addition to the 1,000 marines, the Bataan is equipped with several helicopters.
The United States also has available 250 marines, seven tilt-rotor Osprey aircraft and three refuelling aircraft in Sigonella, Italy.
The GNC passed a vote of confidence in Miitig, who is backed by the Islamists, and his new cabinet amid rising lawlessness in the North African nation dogged by power struggles among rival former rebel militias.
Libya has been awash with weapons since the NATO-backed uprising that killed longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.
Successive governments have failed to control the myriad militias that have carved out fiefdoms across the country, and Miitig is Libya's fifth premier since Kadhafi's ouster.
He is due to lead a transition until legislative elections are held on June 25, and a new parliament replaces the GNC and a new cabinet is formed.
Miitig assumed office to already mounting opposition and with rogue former general Khalif Haftar gathering support for an offensive he launched in the eastern city of Benghazi on May 16.
Near daily attacks blamed on jihadists had been targeting security forces in Benghazi, and several military units have thrown their support behind Haftar.
- 'New Kadhafi' -
The GNC has accused Haftar of launching a coup but he said the Libyan people had given him a "mandate" to crush jihadists after thousands of people rallied in his support in Benghazi and Tripoli.
On Tuesday, Ansar al-Sharia chief Mohammed el-Zehawi urged Libyans not to support Haftar, who he claimed "wants to divide us".
Accusing him of being a "new Kadhafi" and an "agent of American intelligence," he affirmed his group's determination to fight the "tyrant".
Meanwhile, Miitig has tried to reach out to critics, inviting them to take part in a "comprehensive national dialogue to complete state institutions".
He has also committed to "pressing the battle against terrorists and those who threaten the security of the country," referring to jihadists in the east.
But just hours after Miitig and his cabinet were approved by the GNC, autonomist rebels who have been blockading eastern oil terminals said they did not recognise his "illegal" government.
"We reject the government of Ahmed Miitig," said Ibrahim Jodhran, self-proclaimed head of the Cyrenaica Political Bureau, a group demanding greater autonomy for Libya's eastern region.
Jodhran also accused Islamist blocs in the GNC of "illegally imposing" Miitig's cabinet.
Former rebels who fought Kadhafi blockading eastern oil ports since July, preventing crude exports and causing a sharp drop in economically critical oil exports.
Some ports have reopened, but sales are still far short of their previous peak.
No official list of cabinet members has been published until now, and the 2014 budget has yet to be passed because of deep political divisions within the GNC.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------

Wednesday, May 28th 2014
AFP
           


New comment:
Twitter

News | Politics | Features | Arts | Entertainment | Society | Sport



At a glance