Twin car bomb blasts killed two people in the Libyan capital at dawn yesterday on the first day of the Eid Al-Fitr holiday and officials blamed loyalists of now slain dictator Muammer Qaddafi. Tripoli’s security chief Col. Mahmud Al-Sherif told AFP the bombs were detonated by remote control and struck near a military academy and the interior ministry. “They were two car bombs detonated by remote control,” Sherif said, adding that four people were also wounded in the first blast. The first car bomb blew up at 6:00 a.m. near a military academy on Omar Al-Mokhtar Avenue ‚ a main Tripoli thoroughfare that was closed briefly to traffic — and the second near the interior ministry.
An AFP correspondent said checkpoints were set up on other major streets in the city center.
When the avenue was later reopened to traffic, the only sign of the blast was some broken glass on the scorched pavement. Remains of the vehicle had been removed.
The second bomb was concealed in a taxi and blew up in a sidestreet near the interior ministry. There were no casualties. Earlier this month, three men suspected of preparing bomb attacks were killed during a police raid near Tripoli but several of them managed to flee, authorities said. According to Sherif, yesterday’s attacks were orchestrated by “the same sleeper cell,” because the explosives and methods used were the same as in an attack in central Tripoli on August 3 that wounded one person. “This groups is funded by members of the old regime who are in Tunisia and Algeria,” he added.