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This is an archive article published on July 3, 2016

Libya: Car bombing targeting a security chief in Benghazi kills at least two

LANA news agency, based in the country's east, said a vehicle exploded in a western suburb of Benghazi as a convoy of cars drove up carrying the chief of a forensic police unit.

Benghazi, Libya, Libya attack, Benghazi attack, Benghazi military vehicle attack, Benghazi suicide blast, Benghazi army chief car bombed, libya news, Benghazi news, latest news The two dead were in the convoy, it said, while civilians were among the wounded. (Source: Google Map)

At least two people were killed and seven wounded in a nighttime car bomb attack targeting a security chief in the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi, a news agency and medical sources said on Sunday.

LANA news agency, based in the country’s east, said a vehicle exploded at around 2:00 am (0530 IST) in a western suburb of Benghazi as a convoy of cars drove up carrying the chief of a forensic police unit.

The two dead were in the convoy, it said, while civilians were among the wounded.

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A military source said the official, Hamada al-Ramli, escaped unhurt.

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“We have received seven wounded in the explosion, some in serious condition,” Khalil Goueder, a spokesman for the Benghazi Medical Centre, told AFP.

Benghazi, the country’s second city, located 1,000 kilometres (600 miles) from Tripoli, has for the past two years been the scene of clashes between Islamists and forces loyal to a government based in eastern Libya.

The Mediterranean city is plagued by frequent car bombings.

Jihadists such as the Islamic State group took root in Libya in late 2014, taking advantage of the chaos and power struggles that followed the fall of Moamer Kadhafi’s regime in a 2011 revolution.

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