Tobruk, a city in eastern Libya, has been overrun by demonstrators, who reportedly torched a portion of the parliament.
Online photos were uploaded of the protesters burning tires outside showing towering columns of smoke.
There have been protests over ongoing power outages, increased costs, and the impasse in politics in other Libyan cities.
Protesters in Tripoli’s capital, where a separate government is in power, demanded elections.
Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, the leader of the interim unity government, backed up their proposal by stating that all of the nation’s structures had to be overhauled.
The rioting begins a day after meetings in Geneva that were mediated by the United Nations and attempted to prepare the ground for a vote concluded with little success.
Since Col. Muammar Gaddafi was overthrown in a NATO-backed rebellion in 2011, Libya has been in disarray.
The oil-rich nation formerly boasted one of the finest living conditions in Africa, with free medical care and free higher education, and was a major departure point for some of the thousands of migrants traveling to Europe.
However, the peace that contributed to Tripoli’s development has been disrupted, and clashes between opposing parties have occurred often there.
A community in Peru’s Chavin de Huantar area has been completely buried by a landslide. Overhead, a sizable dust plume could be seen forming.
Although at least 150 structures have been wrecked, no fatalities or significant casualties have indeed been confirmed, according to Peru’s Regional Health Directorate.
According to the officials, they are looking for persons who might have vanished during the event.
According to Russian official media, two additional Britons who were apprehended by Russian soldiers in Ukraine have been accused of working as mercenaries.
In April, a chef named Dylan Healy who was serving as a voluntary aid worker was apprehended at a checkpoint.