The Jerusalem Post

Tripoli armed factions take over compound of rival PM in heavy fighting

- • By AHMED ELUMAMI

TRIPOLI (Reuters) – Armed groups aligned with a UN-backed government in Tripoli took over a compound occupied by a rival prime minister early on Wednesday, after heavy fighting that spread to several parts of the Libyan capital.

The offices of a television station sympatheti­c to the self-declared National Salvation Government were burned down in the clashes and the channel went off air. A hospital was also hit.

The fighting apparently was triggered on Monday by a dispute over control of a bank in the Hay al-Andalus neighborho­od, then escalated into power struggles between rival groups from Tripoli and the port city of Misrata and between groups that backed the UN-sponsored Government of National Accord and their opponents.

Tripoli is controlled by a patchwork of armed groups that have built local fiefdoms and vied for power since Libya’s 2011 uprising.

Gun fights continued for much of Tuesday in western Tripoli before spreading to southern neighborho­ods after sunset. Heavy gunfire and explosions could be heard late into the night, with tanks and other heavy weapons deployed on the streets.

By Wednesday, guards belonging to the Central Security of Abu Salim brigade, which is aligned with the Government of National Accord, were posted outside the Rixos hotel complex, where the head of the National Salvation Government, Khalifa Ghwell, had establishe­d a base.

A Reuters reporter said a gate to the complex had been demolished, some of the buildings were damaged or burned, and the brigade’s fighters had secured surroundin­g roads. A loud blast was heard early on Wednesday afternoon near the complex, and at least two members of the Abu Salim brigade were driven away for medical treatment.

One building was being used as a field hospital and officials from Tripoli’s criminal investigat­ions department were removing computers and documents.

Ghwell suffered a minor injury as he tried to leave the Rixos at dawn on Wednesday, one of his aides told local website Afrigatene­ws.

The self-declared prime minister was quoted by the website as saying: “Our National Salvation Government withdrew from its offices in Tripoli to stop the bloodshed.”

No general informatio­n on casualties was available, but a 14-year-old girl was killed when a residentia­l building in central Tripoli was hit, according to relatives.

Tripoli has been suffering an acute liquidity crisis and banks are often the flash points for violence. Last week, the headquarte­rs of Aman bank were gutted by fire after fighting broke out outside the building.

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