Bangkok Post

Tripoli airport shelling hits fuel tanks

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TUNIS: Shelling of Tripoli’s Mitiga airport on Saturday, part of an intensifie­d barrage of artillery fire on the capital in recent days, hit fuel tanks and damaged passenger planes, the Transport Ministry said.

Mitiga is the last functionin­g airport in the Libyan capital, though civilian flights stopped in March because of repeated shelling even before the country imposed a lockdown over the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Brega Petroleum Marketing Company, part of the National Oil Corporatio­n, said its jet fuel tanks at Mitiga caught fire after coming under attack and firemen were working to control the blaze.

The Transport Ministry, blaming eastern-based forces of General Khalifa Haftar, said one of the damaged planes was preparing to fly to Spain to retrieve Libyans stranded in Europe by the coronaviru­s lockdown.

A video by an airport worker showed plumes of black smoke billowing over the apron. Photograph­s showed shrapnel damage sprayed across the nose of a passenger plane.

Gen Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA) has been fighting for more than a year to capture Tripoli, the seat of the internatio­nally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA), with frequent shelling of the capital.

According to the United Nations, four-fifths of the 130 civilian casualties recorded in the Libyan conflict in the first quarter of the year were caused by LNA ground fighting.

Late on Thursday, Turkey and Italy said the area around their embassies in Tripoli was shelled, leading the European Union to condemn the incident, which it said was “attributab­le to

Haftar’s forces”.

LNA spokesman Ahmed al-Mismari denied the LNA had shelled the area. He has not yet commented on Saturday’s shelling at Mitiga.

However, pro-GNA forces have retaken some territory from the LNA around Tripoli during an escalation of fighting in recent weeks with the help of Turkish-supplied drones.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Planes are seen after the reopening of Mitiga Airport in Tripoli, Libya, late last year.
REUTERS Planes are seen after the reopening of Mitiga Airport in Tripoli, Libya, late last year.

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