The Post

Libyan forces capture last Isis enclave in Sirte

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LIBYA: Libyan forces backed by United States air strikes finished clearing the last Islamic State holdout in Sirte yesterday, after a nearly seven-month battle for the militant group’s former North African stronghold.

The forces gained full control over a final patch of ground in Sirte’s Ghiza Bahriya district after hours of clashes. Several dozen women and children who had been holed up with the militants were able to leave the ruined buildings where they had made their last stand.

As celebratio­ns erupted among the Libyan forces, which are dominated by brigades from the city of Misrata, a spokesman said the military campaign would continue until the wider area was secured.

Fighters fired into the air chanting ‘‘Free Libya’’ and ‘‘The blood of the martyrs was not for nothing’’.

The loss of Sirte is a major blow for Isis, leaving the group without any territory in Libya, though it retains an active presence in parts of the vast country.

The jihadist group took over Sirte in early 2015, turning it into their most important base outside the Middle East and attracting large numbers of foreign fighters to the city. It imposed its ultrahardl­ine rule on residents, and extended its control along about 250km of Libya’s Mediterran­ean coastline.

Military spokesman Rida Issa said that although forces had ‘‘secured all the buildings and the streets’’ in Ghiza Bahriya, this did not mean the end of the Misrataled operation. ‘‘We still need to secure the area around Sirte,’’ he said.

French Defence Minister JeanYves Le Drian said: ‘‘This is very good news. The defeat of Daesh (Islamic State) is a very strong act, but it can only be seen as a step . . . the militias that have freed Sirte deserve to be congratula­ted.’’

Libyan and Western officials said some Isis fighters escaped from Sirte before the battle or in its early stages.

They fear an insurgent campaign from outside the city, and there have already been attacks in outlying areas.

The Misrata-led forces counteratt­acked in May after the jihadists moved along the coast towards their city.

The brigades, nominally aligned with a United Nationsbac­ked government in Tripoli, advanced rapidly towards the centre of Sirte before suicide bombers, snipers and mines largely halted their progress.

More than 700 of their fighters have been killed and more than 3200 wounded in the gruelling campaign.

Yesterday, a further three men were killed and about 50 wounded, said Mohamed Lajnef, an official at Sirte’s field hospital. He also said 21 women and 31 children had

"The defeat of [Islamic State] is a very strong act, but it can only be seen as a step . . . the militias that have freed Sirte deserve to be congratula­ted." Jean-Yves Le Drian, French defence minister

been released in Ghiza Bahriya.

Dozens of other women and children - some of them migrants from sub-Saharan Africa held captive by Isis - had escaped or had been released from militant-held ground in recent days.

Mohamed al-Ghasri, another spokesman for the military operation, said there had been two attempted suicide bombings yesterday, including one by a woman, and that more than 30 militants’ bodies had been counted in the rubble.

Since August 1, the US has carried out at least 495 air strikes against Isis forces in Sirte.

Libya remains in turmoil more than five years after the revolution that toppled Muammar Gaddafi. The UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) that arrived in Tripoli in March and supported the campaign in Sirte has made little progress in ending the chaos.

Sirte lies in a strategic position about halfway along Libya’s coastline, near some of the country’s major oil fields and terminals. Close to Gaddafi’s birthplace, it is also the city where he was shot and killed after ruling Libya for 42 years.

Almost all of Sirte’s estimated population of 80,000 fled the city after Isis took over.

Ghasri appeared on television yesterday asking local families not to return until mines had been cleared. - Reuters

 ?? PHOTOS: REUTERS ?? Fighters with Libyan forces allied with the United Nations-backed government celebrate after they finished clearing Ghiza Bahriya, the final district of the former Islamic State stronghold of Sirte.
PHOTOS: REUTERS Fighters with Libyan forces allied with the United Nations-backed government celebrate after they finished clearing Ghiza Bahriya, the final district of the former Islamic State stronghold of Sirte.
 ??  ?? Libyan fighters allied with the UN-backed government look after a boy after they released him from Islamic State-held ground.
Libyan fighters allied with the UN-backed government look after a boy after they released him from Islamic State-held ground.

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