Libya's
deputy industry minister has been shot dead during a visit to his
hometown of Sirte, east of the capital Tripoli, reports say.
Local media quoted officials as saying unknown gunmen "sprayed bullets" at Hassan al-Droui near a central market.
In another development, at least 15 people were killed in clashes between rival tribes in the country's south.
Libya has suffered continuing lawlessness since the overthrow of Col Muammar Gaddafi in October 2011.
"Hassan
al-Droui was killed by unknown attackers overnight, during a visit to
his native city of Sirte," a security official told the AFP news agency.
Sirte
was the site of the final battle of Libya's civil war, during which Col
Gaddafi was captured and shot dead while trying to hide from rebels.
Mr al-Droui was a former member of the National Transitional Council, the political arm of the 2011 uprising.
He
was appointed to his role by the transitional government's first prime
minister and kept his position when Ali Zeidan took over.
Libya has been struggling to assert itself over up to 1,700 different armed militias, each with their own goals, following Col Gaddafi's death.
In smaller towns and cities, local groups of armed men still perform many of the duties of the state.
This
is especially true in the south of the country, where the arduous task
of protecting the open border, which stretches thousands of miles, is
carried out largely by ill-equipped and ill-trained local groups.
Deadly clashes broke out between rival tribes in the southern city of Sabha on Saturday,
The
fighting was reportedly sparked by the killing of a bodyguard
protecting the city's militia leader, a member of the Awlad Suleiman
tribe.
Fellow tribesmen accused the rival Toubou of murdering the leader.
The violence is the worst between the tribes since they struck a ceasefire agreement in March 2012.
Members of the Toubou minority tribe live mainly in neighbouring Chad, but are also found in southern Libya, Niger and Sudan.
They
have in the past complained of not being treated as equals by Arabs
from the coastal cities of the north who tend to dominate the country's
government and security forces, correspondents say.
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