Nine killed, 75 injured after diesel truck catches fire in southern Libya

People fill their cars with fuel from the state fuel distribution company, Brega, that is providing fuel from mobile trucks on the streets of Tripoli, Libya August 6, 2019. (Reuters)
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Updated 01 August 2022
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Nine killed, 75 injured after diesel truck catches fire in southern Libya

TRIPOLI: At least nine people were killed and 75 injured late on Sunday when a fire broke out in a truck transporting diesel fuel to a town in southern Libya, medical and security sources told Reuters.

Pictures posted on the internet by local residents showed a charred truck and several other charred vehicles on both sides of the road in the Ezwaiya area of Bent Bayya municipality.

The three medical sources said bodies were found burned either inside or near vehicles, adding that the death toll was expected to rise as there were serious cases among the injured.

It was not clear if the driver of the truck was among the victims.

“The truck was involved in a traffic accident and overturned,” the security source said.

The source said that after the truck overturned but before it set on fire some people from other cars had approached it to try and take fuel from the truck’s tank.

“(Those) citizens approached it to refuel without realizing the magnitude of the danger,” the source said.

“Unfortunately, the fire broke out in the truck and resulted in the casualties.”

Libya has suffered a fuel shortage since 2014 when the country was divided by a civil war in which rival factions are battling for power following an uprising that toppled long time leader Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.

In many cities citizens have to wait in long queues, sometimes for hours, to refuel their vehicles.

Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, prime minister of the Tripoli-based Government of National Unity, said in a tweet that authorities were “closely following the disaster in Bent Bayya municipality.”

Dbeibah said that instructions were given to transfer the injured people to major hospitals.


Israel agrees to ‘limited reopening’ of Rafah crossing: PM’s office

Updated 26 January 2026
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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.