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Gunmen Kill 12 in Raid on Remote Libyan Oilfield


Gunmen killed 12 people, including two Filipino and two Ghanaian nationals, after storming a remote Libyan oilfield, a Libyan official said Wednesday.

"Most were beheaded or killed by gunfire,'' said Abdelhakim Maazab, commander of a security force in charge of protecting the al-Mabrook oilfield, 170 kilometers (105 miles) south of the Mediterranean city of Sirte.

A French diplomatic source in Paris and another Libyan official said Islamic State militants were behind the attack, which took place Tuesday night.

It was impossible to get more details on the incident, which happened in a remote part of the turbulent desert nation.

The violence followed an assault on a hotel in Tripoli last week that killed nine people, including five foreigners, underscoring the deteriorating security situation in Libya more than three years after the downfall of Moammar Gadhafi.

The Philippines Foreign Ministry said earlier Wednesday that three Filipinos were among seven foreign nationals who had been kidnapped in the Mabrook assault.

But Maazab said eight Libyans, two Filipinos and two Ghanaians were killed during the raid, with nobody kidnapped. He added that his men were back in charge of the field.

French company's stake

Total, the French oil-and-gas company, has a stake in the site, which is currently offline, but it is contracted to a Libyan company. The Filipinos worked for an Italian company.

Libya is in turmoil with two rival governments controlling different areas, each with its own army. Rival armed factions have also been fighting for almost two months for control of Libya's biggest oil ports, Es Sider and Ras Lanuf, on the Mediterranean coast.

The recognized government of Abdullah al-Thinni and the elected parliament have had to work out of an eastern rump state since a faction called Libya Dawn seized Tripoli in August, setting up its own administration and reinstating the old assembly.

Al-Mabrook closed following clashes that shut Es Sider in December. It used to pump 40,000 barrels a day.

Total said it had already withdrawn staff from the site in 2013 and had no personnel onshore since July 2014. It was not clear whether Libya's state-run National Oil Corp. had employed expatriate staff at the field.

Ali al-Hassi, spokesman for an oil guard force, blamed Islamists for the attack. "The field is outside of our control," he said. "Islamic State is controlling it."

It was not immediately possible to verify the assertion that Islamists were involved.

Attack on Tripoli hotel

Militants claiming links to Islamic State, which controls parts of Syria and Iraq, took responsibility for the deadly attack on the Corinthia luxury hotel in Tripoli last week.

However, officials of the government in Tripoli denied the claim, blaming "Gadhafi loyalists" for that assault.

Militants in Libya have claimed loyalty to Islamic State on social media, but facts are hard to get in a country where officials often contradict themselves.

Western powers and Libya's neighbors have been worried about a spread of Islamist militants in the country. Sirte is home to members of the Ansar al-Sharia Islamist group, blamed by Washington for an attack on a U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi in 2012 in which the U.S. ambassador was killed.

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