Violence in Libya killed 643 people last year, amid a sharp rise in crime, according to a parliamentary report that laments a lack of effective policing in the increasingly lawless North African country.
Excerpts of a report by the internal affairs committee of the General National Congress did not give comparative figures for deaths in 2012 nor data on crimes committed.
Since a NATO-backed uprising ousted and killed Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, Libya's authorities have struggled in vain to contain lawlessness, much of it perpetrated by former militias who fought to overthrow the long-time dictator.
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The eastern city of Benghazi, cradle of the 2011 uprising, has seen numerous assassinations of security personnel and judges, as well as a jihadist attack in 2012 against the US consulate that killed ambassador Chris Stevens and three other Americans.
Even Prime Minister Ali Zeidan was kidnapped by militiamen last year before being released several hours later.
In its report, the committee said "crime has become a profession and a source of income in the absence of an effective police force, despite their being 250,000 policemen."
It noted that Libya has one policeman for every 30 people, saying that number is not high enough.
It attributed the rise in crime to "a lack of respect for the law and the impunity with which its perpetrators act," noting that the country is awash with weapons, mostly in the hands of former militias.
The committee also highlighted the fact that the government has integrated into the security forces only 29.6 per cent of the estimated 170,000 militiamen who fought the Kadhafi regime. Many of the rest are refusing to give up their weapons.
The difficulty of the job is highlighted by the fact that Libya has had four interior ministers since Kadhafi's overthrow, with the last two having quit.
Deputy Prime Minister Sadik Abdelkrim currently holds the post in an interim capacity, while Zeidan continues to look for a permanent replacement.