At least 47 people were killed on Thursday when Libya’s worst bomb attack since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi hit a police training centre as hundreds of recruits gathered for a morning meeting.
No group immediately claimed the attack in the town of Zliten, but suicide blasts and car bombings have increased in Libya as Islamist militants have taken advantage of the chaos in the north African country to expand their presence.
Mayor Miftah Hamadi said the truck bomb detonated as about 400 recruits were gathering in the early morning at the police centre in Zliten, a coastal town between the capital, Tripoli, and the port of Misrata.
“It was horrific. The explosion was so loud it was heard from miles away,” Hamadi told Reuters by telephone, his voice choked with emotion. “All the victims were young, and all about to start their lives.”
The charred remains of a vehicle lay strewn across the ground near the police academy building. Parked cars were mangled by the blast’s force.
Witnesses said residents ferried victims to Misrata hospitals in ambulances and cars. Many of the injured had shrapnel wounds and some bodies were too damaged to be identified.
Medical sources initially said 65 people had been killed, including some civilians. But Fozi Awnais, head of the crisis committee for the health ministry in Tripoli, said later that 47 people had died and 118 more were wounded.
Turmoil
Since a Nato-backed revolt ousted Gaddafi in 2011, Libya has slipped deeper into turmoil, with two rival governments and a range of armed factions locked in a struggle for control of the Opec state and its oil wealth.
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.
The Zliten blast was more deadly than an attack in February last year when three car bombs hit the eastern city of Qubbah, killing 40 people in what officials described as a revenge attack for Egyptian air strikes on Islamist targets.
Western powers are pushing Libya’s factions to back a UN-brokered national unity government and join forces against Islamic State militants, but an agreement faces major resistance from several factions on the ground.
For more than a year, an armed faction called Libya Dawn has controlled Tripoli, setting up its own self-declared government, reinstating the former parliament and forcing the recognised government to operate in the east of the country.
Western officials say forming a united government would be the first step in Libya seeking international help to fight Islamic State, help that would include training for a new army and possible air strikes against militant targets. – Reuters