
Gunmen who stormed a luxury hotel in Tripoli on Tuesday blew
themselves up after killing three security guards, Al Arabiya News
Channel reported, quoting security sources.
The gunmen had been chased and held up in the 21st floor of the hotel before they detonated their explosive belts, according to security sources.
The gunmen had been chased and held up in the 21st floor of the hotel before they detonated their explosive belts, according to security sources.
Local
television reported that the prime minister of Tripoli's rival
government and three foreign nationals had been evacuated from the hotel
that is often used by senior officials and overseas delegations.
"The
security forces are evacuating the guests floor by floor. There was
shooting between the gunmen and the security forces," Essam Naas, a
spokesman for Tripoli security forces, told Reuters.
"It is more than likely that there are hostages held by the gunmen on the 23rd floor."
The
gunmen detonated a car bomb outside the Corinthia Hotel, killing the
three guards. At least three attackers entered the hotel.
Libya
is caught up in a conflict between two rival governments - an
internationally recognized one based in eastern Libya and a rival
administration set up in Tripoli after an armed faction called Libya
Dawn took over the capital.
Most foreign governments closed their
embassies and pulled their staff out of Tripoli after fighting erupted
last summer. But some business and trade delegations still visit the
capital.
It was not immediately clear who carried out Tuesday's
attack, but the SITE monitoring service said a militant group claiming
affiliation with Islamic State had claimed responsibility.
Citing
social media, SITE said the group said the attack was revenge for the
death of Abu Anas al-Liby, a suspected al Qaeda member accused of
helping plan the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and
Kenya. He died in hospital this month in New York ahead of his scheduled
trial.
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