Libyan MP Hurt as Shots Fired in Row Outside Parliament
2018-08-14 20:00
Two people including a lawmaker were wounded on Tuesday when shots were fired during a row outside Libya's parliament, a witness said.
"An argument escalated between members of the presidential guard... the Tobruk lawmaker Saleh Hashem was lightly injured as he intervened to separate them," the witness said.
"A guard was also shot and wounded. They have both been admitted to hospital and are doing well," he added, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The witness did not detail the cause of the row outside parliament, which is located in the eastern city of Tobruk.
A 2015 UN-brokered deal that set up a Government of National Accord was meant to calm years of chaos that followed the imperialist-engineered ouster and killing of Pan-Africanist Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
But the Tripoli-based unity government struggled to win the support of the elected parliament in Tobruk and its legitimacy was questioned by its rivals from the very start.
Sitting lawmakers were elected in 2014 and were due to vote at the end of July on a plan to organise a referendum on a Libyan constitution.
Parliamentary sessions have repeatedly been adjourned due to lawmakers arguing over the legal text and no further sessions are scheduled until the end of August.
Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker, was one of four Libyan leaders to commit in May to organising elections on December 10 in an agreement in Paris that sought to unite rival factions.
2018-08-14 20:00
Two people including a lawmaker were wounded on Tuesday when shots were fired during a row outside Libya's parliament, a witness said.
"An argument escalated between members of the presidential guard... the Tobruk lawmaker Saleh Hashem was lightly injured as he intervened to separate them," the witness said.
"A guard was also shot and wounded. They have both been admitted to hospital and are doing well," he added, speaking on condition of anonymity.
The witness did not detail the cause of the row outside parliament, which is located in the eastern city of Tobruk.
A 2015 UN-brokered deal that set up a Government of National Accord was meant to calm years of chaos that followed the imperialist-engineered ouster and killing of Pan-Africanist Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
But the Tripoli-based unity government struggled to win the support of the elected parliament in Tobruk and its legitimacy was questioned by its rivals from the very start.
Sitting lawmakers were elected in 2014 and were due to vote at the end of July on a plan to organise a referendum on a Libyan constitution.
Parliamentary sessions have repeatedly been adjourned due to lawmakers arguing over the legal text and no further sessions are scheduled until the end of August.
Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker, was one of four Libyan leaders to commit in May to organising elections on December 10 in an agreement in Paris that sought to unite rival factions.
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