A bomb exploded on the
runway of Libya's main airport on Friday, the transport minister said,
highlighting the deteriorating security situation in the north African country
almost three years after Muammar Gaddafi was ousted.
Supposedly
one of the best guarded places in Libya, unknown people managed to get onto the
runway at Tripoli International Airport, plant an explosive device at dawn and
detonate it using a timer, Transport Minister Abdelqader Mohammed Ahmed said.
Authorities
closed the airport, the gateway into Libya, for several hours. There is little traffic
after midnight as foreign airlines avoid late flights due to the poor
security at night in the capital, where the government is unable to control
militias which helped oust long-time leader Gaddafi in 2011 but have kept their
guns.
"There
was a small explosion," Ahmed said. "When security and the airport protection
force arrived they found a timer."
Officials
had first suspected rockets fired by militias had landed on the runway as
gunfire could be heard during the night in the capital. Rival militias often
fight over territory or influence in Tripoli or the rest of the country.
Authorities
reopened the airport by using first an alternative runway. Mainly Libyan airline restarted
operations in the afternoon.
"We
cancelled all flights," said the country head of a foreign airline with
several daily flights to Tripoli.
European
carriers such as Lufthansa and British Airways fly to Tripoli apart from Arab
carriers.
Ahmed said
authorities would improve airport security but analysts say the nascent police
and army, still in training, are no match for battle-hardened militias seizing
at will oil fields or ministries to grab power and oil revenues.
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