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Attorney General: Three suspects arrested for raiding Libya's oil company

The Attorney General of Libya said that three suspects were detained after allegedly storming Tripoli's state oil company's headquarters. This comes a day before the rival government to the east had threatened to declare force majeure for oil fields and ports due to the assaults.

The National Oil Corporation is based in Tripoli under the control of the internationally-recognized Government of National Unity. Although the parallel government in Benghazi, in the east, is not recognised internationally by the international community the majority of oilfields are controlled by Khalifa haftar.

The NOC denied that its corporate headquarters were stormed. It called it "completely untrue" and quoted the acting chief of its corporation as saying it was "nothing but a small personal dispute which occurred in reception."

The eastern-based government also threatened to temporarily relocate NOC's HQ to "safe cities", such as Ras Lanuf or Brega which they control.

The Attorney General said that the public prosecution had reviewed all the evidence, examined the scene and reviewed video footage taken at the time of incident, as well as heard testimonies from those who were present.

Attorney General said that the three suspects had been handed over to the Defence Ministry, who was instructed "to arrest any remaining participants in the incident".

NOC reported on Wednesday that the national crude oil production in the last 24 hours was 1,389,055 barils per day. This is normal.

Libya's oil production has been interrupted repeatedly over the past decade, since the chaos began in 2014 after the country was split between rival authorities east and west in response to the NATO-backed revolt that ousted Muammar Gadhafi in 2011. Ahmed Elumami, Ahmed Tolba and Deepa Babington (Reporting).

(source: Reuters)