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Libya central bank reopens after kidnapped official freed

 Libya’s central bank (CBL) says it has resumed opera­tions following the release of a bank official who had been abducted from his home.

CBL confirmed the release of Musaab Muslamm, head of the bank’s information technology department, who was taken on Sunday by an “unidentified party.”

It said Mr Msallem had been taken from the capital, Tripoli, and that other bank employees had been threatened with kidnapping too.

CBL had halted all work, refus­ing to reopen until Mr Msallem was freed. In a brief statement on Monday afternoon, the bank said it was back running as normal as Mr Msallem had returned and was “safe”.

The central bank, which is inde­pendent but owned by the Libyan state, is the only internationally recognised depository for Libyan oil revenues – a vital economic in­come for a country torn for years between two rival governments in Tripoli and Benghazi.

Mr Msallem’s abduction comes a week after the central bank suffered a siege by armed men, according to AFP news agency.

According to local media cited by AFP, the armed men did so to force the resignation of the bank’s governor Seddik al-Kabir.

In office since 2012, Mr Kabir has faced criticism over the man­agement of oil resources and the state budget.

On Monday, Mr Kabir discussed “the increasing threats to the secu­rity and safety of the central bank, its employees and its systems” with British ambassador to Libya Martin Longden, CBL said in a statement on Monday.

Since the ousting and killing of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, the country has suffered from chronic insecurity.

—BBC

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