AT LEAST 60 POLICE OFFICERS KILLED IN MASSIVE TRUCK BOMB AT RECRUITMENT CENTRE.
At least 60 police officers have been killed after a truck bomb was detonated near a recruitment centre in Zliten, Libya.
The bombing was one of the deadliest since Islamist militants started
expanding their presence in the chaos that followed the fall of Muammar
Gaddafi in 2011.
No group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack which left another 200 people injured.
Mayor Miftah Hamadi said the bomb detonated as recruits were
gathering at the police centre in Zliten, a coastal town between the
capital Tripoli and the port of Misrata.
Witnesses said residents were ferrying victims to Misrata hospitals
in ambulances and cars, many with shrapnel wounds. Medical sources said
65 people had been killed, including some civilians, though one official
said between 50 and 60 had died.
Since the NATO-backed revolt ousted Gaddafi, Libya has slipped deeper
into turmoil with two rival governments and a range of armed factions
locked in a struggle for control of the North African state and its oil
wealth.
Many residents took people to hospital in the back of their cars (Picture: Reuters)
In the chaos, Islamic State militants have grown in strength, taking
over the city of Sirte and launching attacks on oilfields. Islamic State
fighters this week attacked two major oil export terminals.
In February last year, three car bombs hit the eastern Libyan city of
Qubbah, killing 40 people in what officials described as a revenge
attack for Egyptian air strikes on Islamist militant targets.
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar