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Wednesday, 24 April 2013

3 Injured As Car Bomb Explodes At Embassy


Laurent Fabius condemns a “terrorist” attack on the French embassy in Libya after it was hit by a car bomb on Tuesday.
Two guards and a young girl were injured in the first of such attack in Tripoli since the 2011 war that ousted Muammar Gaddafi.
The French foreign minsiter, Fabius, condemned what he called a heinous attack and said everything would be done to find the perpetrators after flying in to Tripoli to assess the situation.
“This was a terrorist act … aimed at killing,” Fabius said after he flew in to inspect the damage and visit the wounded, one of whom had emergency surgery.
Following the attack, security will be stepped up across the region.
President of France Francois Hollande called on Libya to bring the bombers to justice and Fabius said Paris was dispatching a counter-terrorism magistrate to help with an investigation.
Libya’s government said it was a “terrorist act” aimed at destabilising the country.
Libyan Prime Minister Ali Zeidan visited the scene with Fabius, viewing the wreckage and the charred and damaged facade of the embassy.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility, but Al-Qaeda’s north African arm, AQIM, had last week threatened retaliation for the French intervention in Mali.
Westerners in the region have been on alert since January’s bloody mass hostage-taking at the In Amenas natural gas plant in Algeria, close to the Libyan and Malian frontiers, during which fighters demanded Paris halt operations in Mali.
The United States said on Tuesday that it stood ready to assist Paris on the case if needed.
Patrick Ventrell, a state department spokesperson, said that the United States condemned the attack, which caused extensive damage to the French mission, and extended sympathies to the two guards who were injured.
The UN Security Council and UN leader Ban Ki-moon also strongly condemned the bombing.
A Security Council statement “condemned in the strongest terms the terrorist attack against the embassy of France in Tripoli.” Council members “expressed their deep sympathy to the families of the victims of this heinous act.”

“The secretary general condemns, in the strongest terms, the attack on the French embassy in Tripoli,” added deputy UN spokesman Eduardo del Buey. “The targeting of diplomatic missions and their staff is not acceptable and never
justifiable.”
One resident living less than 100 metres from the embassy said his windows shook when the first blast occurred.
Diplomatic missions have been targeted in Libya, most notably an attack on the US mission in the eastern city of Benghazi last September that killed the US ambassador and three other Americans.
However Tuesday’s attack is the first such serious assault on an embassy or foreign mission in the capital, Tripoli.

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