TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Gunmen in a crowd of Libyans demanding that lawmakers pass a bill barring former associates of ousted dictator Muammar Gaddafi from power shot at the car of the General National Congress (GNC) speaker, his spokesman said on Wednesday.
Mohammed Magarief,
a former ambassador to India who had survived a gun attack at his home
in January, was unharmed and no one else was hurt in the shooting late
on Tuesday, he said.
Insecurity persists in Libya
after a popular uprising in 2011, and politicians, state buildings and
oil installations have become a focal point of protests as the
government struggles to impose order on a vast and divided country awash
with weapons.
Magarief was driving away from a building on the
outskirts of the capital Tripoli where lawmakers had gathered to vote on
the bill when the unknown assailants shot at his car.Protesters had stopped him and about 100 congress members from leaving for several hours.
"They then escaped. There were no injuries, only the tires were damaged," Rajmi Berruien, a spokesman for Magarief, said.
Prime Minister Ali Zeidan said about 300 protesters had gathered "to put pressure on members to vote on this bill".
Wounded former rebel fighters demanding compensation
for injuries sustained in the 2011 revolt have occupied parliament for a
month and congress members have been meeting elsewhere.After a failed attempt to evict them on Sunday, the group of about 30 former fighters left the parliament building on Tuesday.
yahoo.
ليست هناك تعليقات:
إرسال تعليق