Two heavily armed gunmen stormed a luxury
hotel in Tripoli favoured by Libyan officials and visiting delegations on today,
killing at least eight people including four foreigners before blowing
themselves up, authorities said.
Shooting erupted inside the five-star
Corinthia Hotel and security forces evacuated guests, including Tripoli's prime
minister and an American delegation, after gunmen blasted through the
building's security and reception.
It was one of the worst assaults targeting
foreigners since the 2011 civil war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi and fractured
the oil-producing North African state into fiefdoms of competing armed groups
with two national governments both claiming legitimacy.
A militant group associated with Islamic
State insurgents in Iraq and Syria claimed responsibility for the attack as
revenge for the death of a suspected Libyan al Qaeda operative in the United
States, according to the SITE monitoring service.
But Tripoli officials who have set up their
own self-proclaimed government blamed Gaddafi loyalists bent on killing their
prime minister, who was at the hotel, and said he was rescued without injury.
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