Col Muhammad Suwaysi was shot while leaving a meeting in
Tajoura, a suburb in the east of the capital.
Libya
has been gripped by violence involving militias that spearheaded the 2011
uprising against Muammar Gaddafi. Thousands have been forced to flee recent
fighting in Tripoli.
More than three years after the uprising, Libya’s
police and army remain weak in comparison to the militias who control large
parts of the country.
The official Facebook page of the National Security
Directorate of Tripoli said that Col Suwaysi had been assassinated.
Interior ministry spokesman Rami Kaal told the BBC that the
police chief had been in Tajoura for a meeting with local authorities.
“On his way back from Tajoura, their vehicle was ambushed at
a traffic light by two cars with armed men,” he said.
“Col Suwaysi refused to get out of the car, and the men shot
at the car – he died of a bullet to the head.”
Two of Col Suwaysi’s colleagues complied with orders to
leave the car and were kidnapped, he said.
Kaal described Col Suwaysi as “a friend and a good,
hard-working man”.
Several hundred people are believed to have died in July and
August in an upsurge of unrest.
The fighting has been centred around the international
airport in Tripoli and in the
eastern city of Benghazi.
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