Libyan Prime Minister who was briefly kidnapped on Thursday accused political party in the country of organizing his abduction.
Libyan Prime Minister who was briefly kidnapped on Thursday accused political party in the country of organizing his abduction.
The premier appeared in good health when he arrived at government headquarters after his ordeal, waving to waiting well-wishers as he climbed out of an armored car.
"I hope this problem will be resolved with reason and wisdom" and without any "escalation," Ali Zeidan said in comments broadcast by state television as he left a cabinet meeting.
"It's a political party which wants to overthrow the government by any means," he said later during an interview with France24 television.
"In the coming days I will give more information on who this political party is that organised my kidnapping," Zeidan added.
Witnesses said the Libyan PM was held at a police station south of the capital, and that his captors released him after armed residents surrounded the building and demanded he be let go.
An employee at the hotel -- where Zeidan had taken up residence for security reasons -- told AFP a "large number of armed men" had entered the building but that the staff did not know what was happening.
A Libyan government statement said Zeidan had been taken "to an unknown destination for unknown reasons by a group" of men believed to be former rebels.
The pre-dawn seizure of Zeidan came five days after US commandos embarrassed and angered the government by capturing senior Al-Qaeda suspect Abu Anas al-Libi on the streets of Tripoli, whisking him away to a warship in the Mediterranean.
After being freed, Zeidan met with his ministers and members of the General National Congress (GNC) -- Libya's highest political authority.
The Operations Cell of Libyan Revolutionaries, former rebels who had roundly denounced Libi's abduction and blamed Zeidan's government for it, said it had "arrested" the premier under orders from the public prosecutor.
But the cabinet said on its Facebook page that ministers were "unaware of immunity being lifted or of any arrest warrant" for him.
Later, the Brigade for the Fight against Crime, a police division made up of former rebels, claimed responsibility, the official LANA news agency.
The government said it suspected both groups of being behind the abduction.