Arab News

Battle looms for Sirte as Erdogan accused of targeting ‘oil crescent’

Foreign interferen­ce in Libya has reached ‘unpreceden­ted levels,’ warns UN chief Guterres

- Mohamed El-Shamaa Cairo

A military buildup around the Libyan city of Sirte has raised fears of a major battle for control of the area’s strategic oil reserves.

The Libyan National Army (LNA), which has occupied Sirte since May, accused Turkey of targeting the oil-rich city and supplying militias in the area with weapons.

NLA spokesman Ahmed Al-Mesmari said that western Libya is under total Turkish control. He said that Turkey aims to reach Libya’s “oil crescent,” a coastal region home to most of its oil export terminals. The NLA is closely monitoring Turkey’s moves in Sirte and Al-Jufra, he added. “We expect an attack on Sirte by Turkey and the militias at any time,” Al-Mesmari said.

His statement was confirmed a few days ago on a social media account affiliated with Turkey, which posted a map of areas under its control as well as the latest developmen­ts in Libya.

The map showed areas under the control of Khalifa Haftar, LNA commander, and the Government of National Accord (GNA). It also featured arrows illustrati­ng that Sirte and Al-Jufra are the next targets of the GNA, despite a no-fly zone on the area imposed by the LNA.

The developmen­ts led UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to warn against a military buildup near Sirte.

The warning came after LNA troops led by Haftar retreated and GNA troops led by Fayez Al-Sarraj, prime minister of the GNA of Libya, advanced.

In a UN Security Council meeting chaired by Germany via video conference, Guterres said foreign interferen­ce in Libya had reached “unpreceden­ted levels.” He condemned the violation of a cease-fire in place since 2011, which also called for the handing over of advanced military equipment and a declaratio­n of the number of mercenarie­s involved in the conflict. However, Guterres did not name the parties who violated the cease-fire. During the conference, the representa­tives of Germany, the US and France warned Turkey about its involvemen­t in Sirte.

Egyptian Foreign Minister Sameh Shoukry indirectly criticized Turkey for sending Syrian militants to Libya. “The transfer of Syrian extremist militants to Libyan territorie­s by one of the regional parties aggravates the situation in Libya. This issue is a serious threat to the security of the Libyans as well as neighborin­g Mediterran­ean countries,” he said.

Shoukry added: “These threats clearly and currently endanger Egypt, and we will not tolerate this type of threats which are close to our borders, at a time when foreign interferen­ces provide those militants with support.”

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi suggested that any violation of Sirte and Al-Jufra will push Egypt to intervene in accordance with internatio­nal norms.

Egyptian military expert Samir Farag said that oil is the main reason behind Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s interferen­ce in Libya. Farag said that Sirte and AlJufra

are Erdogan’s two main goals in controllin­g Libya’s “oil crescent.” Mohamed El-Ghobary, former director of the Egyptian National Defense College, said Libya has become “an internatio­nal venue for conflict that is not only regional.” “The whole world agreed that Sirte is a red line and that whoever crosses that line is an aggressor,” he said. El-Ghobary added that Sirte is in the middle of Libya and controls the transfer of oil from south to north, and that Turkey aims to deploy there because of this. But Egypt would not allow this, he said.

HIGHLIGHTS

•LNA

spokesman Al-Mesmari says that western Libya is under total Turkish control.

•Any

violation of Sirte and Al-Jufra will push Egypt to intervene as per internatio­nal norms, says El-Sisi,

•Representa­tives

of Germany, US and France warn Turkey about its involvemen­t in Sirte.

 ?? AFP ?? Military commander Khalifa Haftar’s backers in Libya’s eastern port city of Benghazi have time and again protested against Turkey’s interferen­ce in the country.
AFP Military commander Khalifa Haftar’s backers in Libya’s eastern port city of Benghazi have time and again protested against Turkey’s interferen­ce in the country.

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