lunedì 16 dicembre 2013


End in sight for Tripoli petrol crisis 

Nonostante alcuni sporadici attacchi alle stazioni di servizio a Tripoli, la crisi della benzina sta visibilmente diminuendo, con tutti gli impianti aperti e le code per rifornirsi che iniziano ad accorciarsi. Ventitre persone sono state arrestate nella capitale per atti vandalici contro alcune pompe di benzina. La direzione della sicurezza di Tripoli ha anche riferito che ieri una persona non identificata ha gettato una bomba a mano in una stazione di benzina, ma l'ordigno non è esploso.

Mohammed Swesi, spokesman for the directorate,  told the Libya Herald that police and the army now had full control over petrol forecourts in the capital. Anyone who had broken the law, he added, was being processed and security forces were managing queues to avoid violence.
Swesi emphasised that incident with the grenade was “quickly rectified”.   
The sight of armoured vehicles parked outside the stations and detachments of armed troops patrolling the forecourts appeared to have a calming effect on the public.  In some places, such as Zawiat Al-Dahmani, the entire road outside the petrol station had been blocked off to all traffic except those waiting to fill up.
Speaking yesterday, the Deputy Minister of Interior, Bahloul Al-Sayed, told reporters that three petrol station owners had been arrested for refusing to open their stations.
Swesi, however, indicated that the owners may not have let their petrol reservoirs be filled “because they may be scared of acts of vandalism”.
Congestion has been reported in Zawia, Sorman and Sabratha as drivers from Tripoli have travelled to the towns to refill their cars. This pressure is expected to recede in the next 24 hours as the situation in the capital returns to normal.
Meanwhile, the General National Congress announced that it was suspending its agenda today to discuss the security situation and the petrol crisis and the reasons that led to it.
Congress spokesman Omar Hemidan claimed that the mass queues at petrol stations in Tripoli were engineered deliberately “to create chaos and lack of confidence in the government and the Ministry of Oil and Gas”.
The government was winning, however.
“We reviewed what was done by the government and from my point of view I think that it’s done a good job,” a member of national security congressional committee, Abdulmonem Al-Yaser, told the Libya Herald.
In addition, Yaser said, all  the relevant authorities and citizens should cooperate with the army and its commitment to discipline until the fuel crisis was over.

Source Libya Herald

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