http://news.kuwaittimes.net/2013/04/30/armed-gunmen-surround-another-libyan-ministry/


Armed gunmen surround another Libyan ministry 
TRIPOLI: Gunmen demanding the sacking of former officials of the ousted Kadhafi 
regime surrounded the justice ministry yesterday, stepping up an action started 
at the foreign ministry, an official said. “Several armed men in vehicles 
equipped with anti-aircraft guns surrounded the ministry of justice,” spokesman 
Walid Ben Rabha told AFP. “They asked the minister and staff present to leave 
their offices and close the ministry.” An AFP photographer saw more than 20 
pickup trucks loaded with machine guns, anti-aircraft guns and rocket launchers 
and said they had blocked access to the building.

Dozens of gunmen making the same demand have kept the foreign ministry under 
siege since Sunday, paralysing its work. The interior ministry and national 
television station have also been attacked. On Monday, angry police officers 
firing their guns in the air stormed the interior ministry demanding higher 
wages. Prime Minister Ali Zeidan has denounced the encircling of the foreign 
ministry and other such attacks. On Sunday, he appealed to Libyans to support 
the government in resisting armed groups “who want to destabilise the country 
and terrorise foreigners and embassies,” but said the government would “not 
come into confrontation with anyone.” The government is struggling to assert 
its influence across the country, where former rebels who fought to unseat 
Moamer Kadhafi in 2011 still control large amounts of territory.

The latest events illustrate a rise in violence in Tripoli, where a car bomb 
struck the French embassy last week, wounding two French guards and a girl 
living nearby. Gunmen have said they will lift their siege when their demands 
are met by a vote in the General National Congress-Libya’s highest political 
authority-on a bill calling for the expulsion of former regime employees from 
top government and political posts. The bill could affect several senior 
government figures and has roiled the country’s political class. Under 
pressure, Congress adjourned until Sunday to allow its various political blocs 
to seek consensus on the bill.

That came as protesters gathered in central Tripoli’s Martyrs Square and 
planned to hold a sit-in later yesterday in front of the Congress. In March, 
demonstrators encircled the assembly itself, trapping members inside the 
building for several hours as they called for the adoption of the law. After 
the siege was lifted, gunmen targeted Congress chief Mohammed Megaryef’s 
motorcade without causing any casualties. In other developments yesterday, 
clashes raged in western Libya as tribes from the towns of Nalut and Tiji 
clashed with heavy weapons after an argument between two men, witnesses said. — 
AFP


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