Heavy gunfire as Libyan parliament stormed

Building was attacked with anti-aircraft weapons and rocket-propelled grenades

A spokesman for retired Libyan general Khalifa Haftar said his irregular forces had carried out the assault on the parliament as part of his campaign against Islamist militants. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters.
A spokesman for retired Libyan general Khalifa Haftar said his irregular forces had carried out the assault on the parliament as part of his campaign against Islamist militants. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters.

Heavily armed gunmen stormed into Libya’s parliament today after attacking the building with anti-aircraft weapons and rocket-propelled grenades.

The identity of the armed group was unclear, but a spokesman for retired Libyan general Khalifa Haftar said his irregular forces had carried out the assault as part of his campaign against Islamist militants.

“These are members of the Libyan National Army,” Mohamed al-Hejazi, spokesman for the group said, using the name of the irregular forces loyal to Haftar.

Heavy smoke billowed from the parliament building, and a Reuters reporter said gunmen had closed the streets leading to legislature. Another witness said gunmen had kidnapped two people from the congress.

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Lawmaker Omar Bushah said gunmen had stormed into the General National Congress, raiding lawmakers' offices and set the building on fire. Witnesses reported heavy fighting outside the parliament.

One resident said the attackers later left and that armed locals were now protecting the area. The Reuters reporter saw dozens of armed people near parliament. It was not possible to verify which group they might represent.

Libya's parliament has been paralysed by divisions between Islamist parties and more nationalist rivals. Many Libyans blame the congress for their failure to progress toward democratic transition since the fall of veteran ruler Muammar Gadafy in 2011.

Haftar, a former rebel in the war against Gadafy, sent his fighters into Benghazi on Friday against Islamist militants based in the city after, saying Libya’s government had failed to halt violence there.

After the ousting of Gadafy, Libya’s weak government and army have been unable to impose state authority over heavily armed brigades of former rebels and militias who have become the North African country’s powerbrokers.

New prime minister Ahmed Maiteeq has formed a government pending parliamentary approval this week, officials said today, after the country went nearly two months without a functioning government.

Reuters