A day after rioters armed with knives and guns stormed the legislature building, torching furniture, killing a guard and wounding six lawmakers in the latest episode of turmoil in the country, Libya's parliament moved into a five-star Tripoli hotel Monday, the Associated Press reported.
The country's biggest political blocs, each backed by militias, have been mounting with tensions leading to the potential explosiveness of political disputes.
After its mandate ran out on Feb. 7, protesters demanded that parliament be disbanded immediately.
While parliament was in session on Sunday, dozens of protestors swept into the parliament chamber, shooting guns, throwing bottles at lawmakers and setting fire to furniture. According to the AP, they took the seat of the parliament's president - the head of a main Islamist bloc - tied it to a lamppost outside and set it on fire.
While trying to protect workers trapped inside, one guard was killed, security official Essam al-Naass said. While trying to leave the premises, two lawmakers were shot in their legs, one was injured with broken glass and others were beaten up.
Lawmaker Hussein al-Ansari told The Associated Press that the parliament will now hold its sessions in the five-star Waddan hotel in the capital's downtown.
"Nearly three years after the spark of the Libyan revolution that ended the 42-year-rule of dictator Moammar Gadhafi, militias wield the real power in Libya," the AP reported. "They have lined up behind the main political factions locked in a power struggle - with supporters of Western-backed Prime Minister Ali Zidan on one side and, on the other, Islamist factions in parliament trying to remove him."
The AP continued, "Parliament's term expired on Feb. 7, but lawmakers voted to extend it with plans to hold new elections in the spring. Since then, hundreds of protesters have held daily demonstrations demanding the legislative body be dissolved."
Parliament's president, Islamist-leaning Nouri Abu Sahmein, denounced Sunday's attack in a televised statement, saying it targeted "the headquarters of legitimacy."
Without naming certain parties or groups, he warned against using young men after equipping them with weapons to carry "actions against legitimacy."
According to the AP, some lawmakers said that the assault was triggered by an earlier attack on an anti-parliament sit-in a day earlier where unidentified assailants kidnapped two of the protesters for one day after setting fire to a tent, witnesses said.
Lawmaker Souad Sultan, from the non-Islamist grouping the National Forces Alliance, said the kidnapping "triggered the violent reaction, which might have been exploited by a certain party." She said she came under attack by the protesters who surrounded her car and stomped it with their feet and fists while trying to block the road in front of her.
The attack on the parliament comes at a time killings and counter-attacks mainly targeting foreigners, Christian migrants, pro-government militias and the nascent military have escalated in the eastern part of the country.
"The latest assassination came Sunday, when gunmen shot French engineer Patrice Real, who worked for a company contracted by a medical center, as he drove in the city center of Benghazi," the AP reported.
Official news agency LANA, which has been working there on medical centers since 2009, said the engineer's company withdrew all its employees from Benghazi. It was not clear if the projects had been stopped.
Last month, seven Coptic Christian Egyptians were killed after masked men kidnapped them from their houses, tied their hands behind their back and shot them in the head and the chest, the AP reported.