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Eastern Libya attacks kill four in under 24 hours

By AFP
Libya Libyan security forces members man a security checkpoint on November 8, 2013 in the eastern Benghazi city.  By Abdullah Doma AFP
NOV 9, 2013 LISTEN
Libyan security forces members man a security checkpoint on November 8, 2013 in the eastern Benghazi city. By Abdullah Doma (AFP)

Benghazi (Libya) (AFP) - A string of attacks in eastern Libya has killed a public prosecutor and three members of the security forces in less than 24 hours, judicial and medical sources said on Saturday.

Since the ouster of veteran dictator Moamer Kadhafi in October 2011, eastern Libya has been hit by a wave of bombings and shootings, mostly targeting security officials.

Prosecutor Mohamed al-Naass was killed in the town of Derna on Saturday when an explosive device attached to his car detonated, a judicial source told AFP.

Naass was responsible for the "Al-Jabal Al-Akhdar region, east of Benghazi," the source said.

In Benghazi, Libya's second city, gunmen driving past an army checkpoint shot dead two special forces soldiers late on Friday, Al-Jala hospital spokeswoman Fadia al-Barghathi told AFP.

Barghathi added that the body of a police lieutenant colonel, Sherif al-Ajili, had been brought to the hospital late on Friday, and that he had been "killed by a gunshot wound to the head".

Troops and police have beefed up their presence in Benghazi to try to check the attacks, although so far their presence has done little to stop the violence.

Libya's government has struggled to stamp its authority as militias of ex-rebels have carved their own fiefdoms in a country flooded with weapons looted from Kadhafi's arsenal.

Violence and insecurity have also hit the capital this week.

Two people were killed and 29 others wounded in clashes between rival militias in Tripoli on Thursday, the latest incident in a wave of violence that is terrorising residents and underlines the country's instability.

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