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Libyan oil blaze out of control

Government blames militia rivals for latest crisis.

By Daniel J. Graeber
Oil fire at airport in Tripoli burning out of control. (UPI Photo/Hugo Philpott)
Oil fire at airport in Tripoli burning out of control. (UPI Photo/Hugo Philpott) | License Photo

TRIPOLI, Libya, July 29 (UPI) -- Libyan officials said fires at an oil storage site near the airport in the capital city, sparked by violence, continue to burn out of control.

Fires were still burning at the oil depot near the international airport in Tripoli. An uptick in violence prompted the U.S. government to suspend operations at its embassy in the city.

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At least 150 have died in two weeks of fighting between militias and pro-government forces in Tripoli and Benghazi.

The government said fighting between rival militias in Tripoli was to blame for the oil depot blaze. Mohamed al-Harrai, a spokesman for the Libyan National Oil Co., told the BBC firefighters Monday had the blaze under control, but were forced to give up when fighting erupted in the area.

NOC said the violence made it difficult to feed the domestic gasoline market, leaving many filling stations without fuel.

The interim government in Tripoli issued a plea for international help with controlling the violence.

International forces intervened in a civil war in 2011 that left longtime leader Moammar Gahdafi dead. Once one of North Africa's top producers, Libya has struggled to keep oil output close to pre-war levels above 1 million barrels per day.

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