UPDATE Seized Libyan PM in good health, treated well: Official
TRIPOLI: Libya's Prime Minister Ali Zeidan is in "good health and will be treated well as a Libyan citizen," and is being held at the Interior Ministry's anti-crime department, an official with the department told the state news agency. Zeidan was seized on Saturday by former rebels who blamed him for the government's role in the U.S. capture of a top al Qaeda suspect in the Libyan capital days earlier. The former rebels were working for the Interior Ministry to provide security in the capital. -----------------------------------------------
AFP: TRIPOLI: Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan was
kidnapped from his Tripoli hotel at dawn on Thursday by armed men and taken to an unknown location,
the government and sources said. The abduction comes five days after US
commandos embarrassed and angered Libya's government by capturing senior Al-Qaeda suspect Abu Anas
al-Libi off the streets of Tripoli and whisked him away to a
warship. "The head of the transitional government, Ali Zeidan, was taken
to an unknown destination for unknown reasons by a group" of men believed to be former rebels, the
government said in a brief statement on its website. A source in the
premier's office said Zeidan had been kidnapped from Tripoli's Corinthia Hotel, where he
resides. "A large number of armed men entered the place very early on
Thursday. But we did not know what was happening," a hotel employee told AFP, speaking on condition
of anonymity. Contacted by AFP, Justice Minister Salah al-Marghani
confirmed the information but gave no further details. Two years after
the revolution that toppled dictator Moamer Kadhafi, the country's new authorities are struggling to
rein in tribal militias and groups of former rebels who spearheaded the
uprising. The government statement said it suspected two groups of
ex-rebels, the Chamber of Revolutionaries and the Brigade for the Fight against Crime, which in
principle fall under the defence and interior ministries, of being behind the
abduction. The cabinet and the General National Congress, Libya's top
political authority, were dealing with the situation, the statement said, while calling on citizens
to remain calm. US State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki,
travelling with Secretary of State John Kerry in Brunei, said on Thursday Washington was seeking
more information. "We are looking into these reports and we are in close
touch with senior US and Libyan officials on the ground," she told
reporters. "We are working to determine more details. Our embassy staff
is safe in Tripoli. We have no further details at this time." Zeidan, who
was named prime minister a year ago, had on Tuesday condemned the US raid and insisted that all
Libyans should be tried on home soil. The General National Congress has
demanded that Washington "immediately" hand back Libi, claiming his capture was a flagrant violation
of the country's sovereignty. Libi -- real name Nazih Abdul Hamed
al-Raghie -- was on the FBI's most wanted list with a $5-million (3.7-million-euro) bounty on his
head for his alleged role in the 1998 twin bombings of two US embassies in East
Africa. He is reportedly being held aboard a US Navy ship in the
Mediterranean. US President Barack Obama said on Tuesday Libi was
involved in plots that killed hundreds of people and will be brought to
justice. Vowing that America will continue to hunt down regional terror
groups, Obama said Libi "helped plan and execute plots that killed hundreds of people, a whole lot
of Americans. We have strong evidence of that. And he will be brought to
justice." Many Libyans blame political rivalries for the problems
plaguing a country awash with militias and weaponry left over from the 2011 revolution that toppled
Kadhafi. Public anger is growing as widespread violence including
political assassinations proliferates -- particularly in the east of the
country.
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