TRIPOLI: A gunbattle between youths allegedly competing for space in a market and a car explosion rocked the center of the Libyan capital on Saturday, wounding one person, residents and security sources said.
“There was a fight between youths over market space,” Mohammed, a young resident of Al-Rashid neighborhood near Martyr’s Square, told AFP.
“They were shooting at each other,” he said, adding that explosives of the kind used in fishing were also thrown in the clash that happened at around dawn.
An explosion in a car — apparently caused by similar explosives — rocked the same area.
“The car, a Honda Civic, blew up to pieces,” said a guard stationed at a military police base just meters (yards) from the site of the blast.
Senior officers at the same branch declined to comment.
The official LANA news agency later cited a security official as saying that “preliminary investigations ruled out it was a car bomb.”
And a foreign security expert who evaluated the scene confirmed to AFP that the explosion appeared to have been caused by TNT used in fishing, basing that assessment on the nature of the scorch marks and absence of a crater.
He too said the blast did not appear to have been caused by a car bomb.
Images posted on social media showed the charred remains of a red vehicle.
Dark scorch marks scored the sides of buildings on the corner where most of the fighting and the blast took place, and the windows of several clothes shops in the area were pockmarked by bullet holes.
A couple of vehicles parked on the commercial street also had bullet holes in them.
Witnesses reported that one person had been wounded.
Medical officials at Al-Huruq hospital said they admitted a 54-year-old Tunisian who was wounded by shrapnel from an explosion. He was under anaesthesia following an operation, an AFP photographer said.
Al-Rashid is known as one of the rougher areas in Tripoli and is also a hub for unlicensed market stalls selling T-shirts, jeans and suitcases.
While it was business as usual on Saturday, the underlying mood was tense and many residents declined to comment on the cause of the conflict or those involved. “Everyone is tense here because there is no security,” said one shopkeeper.
Most of the urban violence to have hit Libya in the wake of last year’s revolt which ousted Muammar Qaddafi has taken place in the eastern city of Benghazi.
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Gunfight, car blast rock Libyan capital
Gunfight, car blast rock Libyan capital
Israel agrees to ‘limited reopening’ of Rafah crossing: PM’s office
- The announcement came after visiting US envoys reportedly pressed Israeli officials to reopen the crossing, a vital entry point for aid into Gaza
JERUSALEM: Israel said Monday it would allow a “limited reopening” of the Rafah border crossing between Gaza and Egypt once it had recovered the remains of the last hostage in the Palestinian territory.
The announcement came after visiting US envoys reportedly pressed Israeli officials to reopen the crossing, a vital entry point for aid into Gaza.
Reopening Rafah forms part of a Gaza truce framework announced by US President Donald Trump in October, but the crossing has remained closed after Israeli forces took control of it during the war.
The Israeli military also said it was searching a cemetery in the Gaza Strip on Sunday for the remains of the last hostage, Ran Gvili, a non-commissioned officer in the police’s elite Yassam unit.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s office said the reopening would depend on “the return of all living hostages and a 100 percent effort by Hamas to locate and return all deceased hostages,” Netanyahu’s office said on X.
It said Israel’s military was “currently conducting a focused operation to exhaust all of the intelligence that has been gathered in the effort to locate and return” Gvili’s body.
“Upon completion of this operation, and in accordance with what has been agreed upon with the US, Israel will open the Rafah Crossing,” it said.










