The French embassy in Tripoli, Libya was bombed on April 23, 2013. It was the first attack on the French embassy in the capital., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Egyptian diplomat kidnapped in Libyan capital
4:33pm EST
TRIPOLI (Reuters) - Unidentified gunmen kidnapped an Egyptian diplomat in the Libyan capital Tripoli on Friday, officials said, hours after a powerful Libyan militia reported the arrest of its leader in Egypt.
The diplomat works as administrative attaché at the Egyptian mission, the Libyan and Egyptian foreign ministries said. No more details were immediately available.
"Talks are being held to free him," said a spokesman for the Egyptian foreign ministry.
The kidnapping comes shortly after the Operations Room of Libya's [counter] Revolutionaries, a powerful militia, said its leader Shaban Hadia had been arrested in Egypt.
"Mr Shaban Hadia was arrested in Egypt where he travelled with his family for medical treatment," said Adel al-Gharyani, one of the leaders of the group, adding that security forces had stormed the place where he had been staying.
He denied the group had kidnapped the Egyptian diplomat but called on Cairo to release Shaban.
"We warn the Egyptian authorities to release him in the next hours," he said. "If this doesn't happen then there will be a strong response from our side."
There was no immediate comment from Egyptian officials on the Shaban arrest.
The Operations Room is one of dozens of large militias which helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising but refuse to disarm. Government officials blamed the group for the brief kidnapping of Prime Minister Ali Zeidan in October.
Foreigners have been targeted in several incidents recently in the OPEC producer.
Libyan security forces earlier this week freed a South Korean trade official who had been held for days by unknown gunmen.
An American teacher was shot dead in Benghazi in December, and in January, a British man and a New Zealand woman were killed execution-style on a beach in western Libya.
Security has deteriorated in Libya as the government struggles to control former rebels, militias and Islamist militants in the vast North African country still awash with weapons.
(Reporting by Ghaith Shennib, Ulf Laessing, Firas Bosalum and Ali Abdelati; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall)
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