Gunmen
attack Russian embassy in Libya's Tripoli
The
Russian embassy in Tripoli, Libya, has come under fire and there were
attempts to get into Russia’s diplomatic compound, Russia’s
Foreign Ministry said in a statement.
RT,
2
October, 2013
“There
has been an incident in Tripoli tonight, in which there was shelling
and attempts to enter the territory of the Russian Embassy in this
country,”
Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich told RT.
According
to preliminary information, there are no reports of injuries among
the staff.
The
ITAR-TASS news agency's witnesses said attackers tore down a Russian
flag. The situation was soon brought under control and there are
currently no intruders on Russia’s embassy territory.
According
to reports, around 10 attackers drove to the embassy in two cars.
Libyan News Agency (LANA) reports that they first opened fire on a
parked diplomatic vehicle.
A
video still from Ruptly's
exclusive footage
shows a car burning in an almost deserted street outside the embassy.
After
setting the car ablaze, the attackers opened fire on the diplomatic
building itself, LANA reported. But as security forces arrived
at the scene, they drove off in an unknown direction.
A
similar attack on Russia’s Tripoli embassy took place in February
2012 when protesters stormed the compound, condemning Russian and
Chinese decisions to block the UN resolution against Syria. No one
was injured in that attack.
Nearly
two years after Gaddafi was deposed and killed, Tripoli and other
Libyan cities have been plagued by violence, lawlessness and
factional infighting.
The
presence of militiamen remains more visible than actual state
security forces in the capital, while vast portions of the
oil-producing desert country remain completely out of the central
government’s control.
Libya’s
prime minister has appealed for international help as the country
struggles through political turmoil amid stunted oil exportation
which is costing the country $130 million a day.
As Libya
continues to be mired in post-Western intervention disarray,
Gaddafi's overthrow has not shown to have yielded a conciliatory
political climate as many had hoped.
“Ever
since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi’s government we’ve seen in
Libya the mob rule of countless militias or death squads,”
activist and journalist Sukant Chandan told RT.
One of the most
vicious attacks on foreign embassies in Libya took place in September
2012, when the US ambassador to Libya and three other Americans were
killed
as armed militants assaulted Washington's consulate in Benghazi.
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