Nine killed as gunmen with IS links storm luxury hotel in Libyan capital

Nine people including at least five foreigners were killed Tuesday in an assault on a luxury hotel in the Libyan capital Tripoli, a spokesman for the security services said. The dead included three security guards killed in the initial attack on the Corinthia Hotel, five foreigners shot dead by gunmen and another person taken hostage by the attackers, Issam al-Naass said. The nationalities of the foreigners and the person taken hostage were not immediately known, but Naass said two of the foreigners were women. The hostage died when the three gunmen blew themselves up after being surrounded on an upper floor, Naass said.

After being pursued and surrounded on the hotel’s 24th floor, the attackers detonated explosive belts they were wearing.

Essam Naass, security spokesman

The 24th floor is normally used by Qatar’s mission to Libya but no diplomats or officials were present there during the assault, a security source said. The head of Libya’s self-declared government, Omar al-Hassi, was inside the hotel at the time of the attack but was evacuated safely, Naass said. A militant group claiming affiliation with the Islamic State has claimed responsibility on social media, saying the attack was revenge for the death of Abu Anas al-Liby, the suspected al Qaeda figure alleged to have helped plan the 1998 bombings of the U.S. embassies in Tanzania and Kenya. He died in hospital this month in New York ahead of his scheduled trial.