Libyan Border Guards Shoot Two Egyptians Trying To Cross Into Tunisia

Two people were shot dead when Libyan border guards opened fire to disperse hundreds of Egyptians trying to cross into Tunisia to flee Libya's growing chaos, the Tunisian state news agency TAP said on Thursday, according to Reuters.

Hundreds of Libyan families and foreign workers have fled their homes after two weeks of clashes between rival Libyan militias over Tripoli's airport in the worst violence since the 2011 war to oust Muammar Gaddafi, Reuters reported.

Most Libyan airports are closed because of deteriorating security in Tripoli and Benghazi, leaving Tunisia's border one of the few routes out for residents and some foreign diplomats fleeing bloodshed in the capital, according to Reuters.

Hundreds of Egyptians were protesting at the border point of Ras Jdir after the Tunisian border guards closed its gates on Thursday, a Reuters reporter at the site said, Reuters reported.

"The incident came after Libyan troops fired to disperse the Egyptians," TAP said, citing Tunisian security sources, who said the two victims had been shot, according to Reuters. There was no immediate comment from the Libyan authorities.

Tunisia, Algeria and Egypt are all concerned about violent spillover from Libya's growing chaos involving clashes between rival militia factions and also Islamist militants and the armed forces, Reuters reported.

Tunisia said on Wednesday it might close its frontiers with Libya if the security situation keeps worsening, according to Reuters.

"The situation is still under control, around 5,000 to 6,000 peoples are crossing every day, but we need to be careful," Tunisian Foreign Minister Mohamed Hamdi told reporters, Reuters reported.

Tunisia is increasingly worried about border security as it struggles with the rise of Islamist militants benefiting from the chaos in North African countries such as Libya and Mali, according to Reuters.

Earlier this month, 15 Tunisian soldiers were killed when dozens of gunmen with rocket-propelled grenades attacked two checkpoints in Chaambi near Algeria's border, one of the deadliest strikes against Tunisia's armed forces, Reuters reported.