Tuesday, January 27, 2015

BREAKING NEWS: 'ISIS' gunmen kill at least eight, blow up a car and take hostages at luxury hotel in Tripoli

BREAKING NEWS: 'ISIS' gunmen kill at least eight, blow up a car and take hostages at luxury hotel in Tripoli

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2928176/Gunmen-assault-Tripoli-hotel-popular-foreigners.html

  • Tripoli branch of Isis claimed it stormed the Corinthia Hotel in the city
  • Security forces surrounded the hotel, which is popular with foreigners
  • Five armed men detonated a car bomb, which killed three guards
At least eight people, including five foreigners, were killed during an attack by gunmen against a luxury hotel in the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Tuesday, a security official told local television.

Mahmoud Hamza, director of Libya's special deterrence force, told al-Naba television that five foreigners, including two women, as well as a security officer and two of the gunmen, died in the attack on the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli. He did not give the nationalities of the foreigners.

Militants from Isis in Libya claimed responsibility for the attack.

Scroll down for video 
Militants from Isis in Libya claimed an assault on a Tripoli hotel popular with foreigners today - the Corinthia - setting off a car bomb that left at least one dead. Pictured are Libyan security forces surrounding the hotel
Militants from Isis in Libya claimed an assault on a Tripoli hotel popular with foreigners today - the Corinthia - setting off a car bomb that left at least one dead. Pictured are Libyan security forces surrounding the hotel

Security forces had surrounded the Corinthia Hotel in central Tripoli and gunfire was heard from nearby.

A hotel staffer said the attack began when five masked gunmen wearing bulletproof vests stormed the hotel after security guards at the hotel's gate tried to stop them. He said they entered the hotel and fired randomly at the staff in the lobby.

The staffer said the gunmen fired in his direction when he opened his door to look out. He said he joined the rest of the staff and foreign guests fleeing out the hotel's back doors into the parking lot.
When they got there, he said a car bomb exploded in the parking lot, only a hundred meters away.

He said this came after a protection force entered the lobby and opened fire on the attackers. He said two guards were immediately killed. 

The staffer spoke on condition of anonymity because he feared being targeted later by militants. He said the car bomb left at least five cars in the parking lot burned and damaged some windows in the hotel's facade.

He said the hotel had Italian, British and Turkish guests, but the hotel was largely empty at the time of the attack. 

He said the militia-backed Prime Minister Omar al-Hassi usually resides at the hotel, but was not there Tuesday. Al-Hassi's security guards also weren't there, he said. The hotel previously came under attack in 2013 when a former prime minister was abducted there.

'The security forces are evacuating the guests floor by floor. There was shooting between the gunmen and the security forces,' Essam Naas, a spokesman for Tripoli security forces, told Reuters.

'It is more than likely that there are hostages held by the gunmen on the 23rd floor.'
One gunman has been arrested, Naas said, adding that security forces were surrounding the seaside hotel. Two Filipino women were wounded by smashed window glass.

Several others were wounded in the attack, the sources said, without providing further details. Several ambulances were gathered near the hotel.

In a brief statement on Twitter, the Tripoli branch of Isis claimed to have stormed the hotel, the SITE Intelligence monitoring group said. 

'It's an evolving situation, what we're hearing is what is being reported on the news,' a spokesman for the Malta-based Corinthia Hotel chain, Matthew Dixon, told AFP by telephone.

'Our thoughts are with our staff and guests,' he said. 'We have no further information.'






EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini expressed concern, calling the attack 'another reprehensible act of terrorism which deals a blow to efforts to bring peace and stability to Libya' 
In a brief statement on Twitter, the Tripoli branch of Isis claimed to have stormed the hotel 
In a brief statement on Twitter, the Tripoli branch of Isis claimed to have stormed the hotel 

EU foreign affairs chief Federica Mogherini expressed concern, calling the attack 'another reprehensible act of terrorism which deals a blow to efforts to bring peace and stability to Libya'.

She expressed 'solidarity with the victims and their families' but provided no details of casualties.

'Such attacks should not be allowed to undermine the political process,' Mogherini said in a statement.

The North African nation has been wracked by conflict since the overthrow of dictator Moamer Kadhafi in a 2011 uprising, with rival governments and powerful militias battling for control of key cities and the country's oil riches.

The Islamist-backed Fajr Libya (Libya Dawn) militia alliance took control of Tripoli last summer, forcing the country's internationally recognised government to flee to the far east.

No comments:

Post a Comment