More than 40 killed in depot blast in Libya, more clashes in east

TRIPOLI/BENGHAZI, Libya,  (Reuters) – More than 40 people were killed yesterday in an explosion at an army depot in southern Libya after locals tried to steal ammunition, officials said, while four soldiers died in clashes in the restive eastern part of the country.

The incidents highlighted the turmoil in Libya where the government is trying to restore order in the oil-producing country, which is awash with weapons after the 2011 ouster of Muammar Gaddafi.

The blast in Brak al-Chati, near the main southern city of Sabha, happened after a group of 43 locals and Africans went to the army depot to steal ammunition, a security official said.

“More than 40 people were killed,” said Khalifa Alsghair, commander of a border security guard brigade in Brak al-Chati.

A local security official also put the toll at above 40 but medics in a hospital said the figure was probably too high because they had only received so far two dead bodies and four injured.

It was unclear what caused the explosion, which set off a fire.

Libya’s nascent military is struggling to secure army bases and curb Islamist militants, militias and gangs who fought in the uprising against Gaddafi but refuse to disarm and control parts of the country.

The four soldiers were killed in Benghazi as clashes erupted between army special forces and militant Islamists of the Ansar al-Sharia group, officials said.

The trouble started when soldiers stopped a car loaded with weapons, explosives and large amount of money.

“Three soldiers were killed in clashes with Ansar al-Sharia,” Wanis Bukhmada, commander of the special forces in Benghazi, said at a news conference.