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Libyan Official Kidnapped in Libyan Capital Tripoli

October 19, 2025
Libyan Official Kidnapped in Libyan Capital Tripoli
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A chaotic episode surrounding the alleged abduction of Dr. Tariq Al-Hamshari, Director-General of the Emergency Medicine and Support Centre in Libya, and two of his companions has thrown a harsh spotlight on the country’s mounting security vacuum and the weakness of the outgoing government under Abdel‑Hamid Dbaiba.

According to a statement issued by the Social Council of Souq Jumaa & the Four Suburbs, Al-Hamshari and his associates were forcibly taken by armed individuals in a grave incident described as “unacceptable” and accompanied by a 24-hour ultimatum for their release.
However, shortly after, the Emergency Medicine Centre issued a conflicting explanation stating that no abduction took place; rather, Al-Hamshari had been on an inspection tour in remote areas where communication was temporarily lost, prompting misinterpretation of the situation.

The divergence between the local council’s allegations and the official account underscores the deep-seated institutional chaos and lack of unified information in Libya’s security architecture. A security official, speaking anonymously, described the incident as “a microcosm of the Tripoli governance crisis. The absence of accurate data, contradictory statements and the absence of a unified security authority amount to institutional anarchy.”

Critics point to the government’s failure to act swiftly or consistently. The local council placed direct responsibility on official entities, reflecting a profound breakdown in trust between local actors and central authorities. Analysts warn that the situation is not merely about one incident—it signals a broader crisis of governance in which the government cannot guarantee the safety of its officials or manage the flow of information.

Ultimately, whether or not an abduction occurred, the incident of Al-Hamshari’s disappearance reveals a deeper wound in the body of the Libyan state: the deterioration of control, the crescendo of public threats by armed local groups and the inability of a government near the end of its mandate to present a consistent, credible narrative in real time. All of these factors combine to further erode public trust and call into question the state’s monopoly on security and communications.

Tags: Abdel-Hamid DbaibaChaosGNUlibyatripoli
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