The National - News

Libyan forces in final push for Sirte

Troops loyal to UN-backed government enter the last ISIL-held areas in the city, but extremists counter with car bombs

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SIRTE, LIBYA // Forces loyal to Libya’s UN- backed unity government yesterday pushed into the last areas of Sirte held by ISIL in what was the extremists’ coastal stronghold.

The battle for the hometown of Libya’s murdered dictator Muammar Qaddafi was launched more than three months ago by forces loyal to the Government of National Accord based in Tripoli.

ISIL captured the city on the Mediterran­ean coast in June last year, sparking fears they would use it as a launch pad for attacks on Europe.

This month, the pro-GNA forces seized the extremist’s headquarte­rs in Sirte, pinning them down in a small area in the city centre near the sea.

“Our forces entered the last areas held by Daesh in Sirte: District Number 1 and District Number 3,” a spokesman for the pro-GNA forces said. “The final battle for Sirte has started.”

About 1,000 pro-GNA fighters were taking part in the offensive, he said.

Several tanks and armed vehicles moved towards District Number 1 and gunfire and rocket explosions could be heard as they entered the northern neighbourh­ood.

At least 25 loyalists were killed yesterday and 120 wounded, a field hospital for the pro- GNA forces said.

The bodies of two ISIL fighters lay on a street inside District Number 1, he said, adding that black smoke was rising from both districts.

The pro- GNA forces said the offensive came “after air strikes overnight” and as they pressed the assault the extremists countered with car bombs. “The Daesh gangs committed mass suicide today when they sent five car bombs and a suicide bomber to try to stop our advancing forces,” they said.

Since August 1, US warplanes have backed the assault to expel ISIL from Sirte, and as of Wednesday, they had carried out 82 strikes, according to the US Africa Command. The pro- GNA forces fought their way into Sirte on June 9 and two months later seized the ISIL headquarte­rs at the Ouagadougo­u conference centre. But their advance has been slowed by snipers, suicide bombings and booby traps.

Loyalist forces are mostly militias from western cities that have sided with the unity government of prime minister- designate Fayez Al Sarraj and the guards of oil installati­ons that ISIL has repeatedly tried to seize.

Ahead of yesterday’s assault, they prepared their tanks for inspection, cleaned their weapons and massed on the outskirts of Sirte and around the two districts.

“We hope that God will help us defeat them,” one fighter, Osama Mohammad Mosbah, said.

Fighting erupted on Saturday on the edges of District Number 1 between the extremists and loyalist forces armed with machinegun­s and rocket launchers.

Pro-GNA snipers gathered on the roofs of buildings whose facades were still painted with the ISIL black flag.

More than 370 pro-GNA fighters have been killed and nearly 2,000 wounded in the battle for Sirte since May.

ISIL took advantage of chaos in Libya since the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed Qaddafi, where rival militias and authoritie­s have vied for control.

A UN-brokered deal struck in December led to Mr Al Sarraj’s unity government taking office in the capital, but it has since struggled to fully assert its authority.

The presidenti­al council head- ed by Mr Al Sarraj said that it would present a new cabinet line-up in an attempt to secure the backing of parliament.

The legislatur­e, which rejected a previous unity government in a vote today, gave the council a “fi- nal chance” and 10 days to propose a new cabinet.

For more on LIBYA, visit thenationa­l.ae/topics

 ?? AFP ?? Forces loyal to Libya’s Government of National Accord fire at ISIL militants in the coastal city of Sirte yesterday.
AFP Forces loyal to Libya’s Government of National Accord fire at ISIL militants in the coastal city of Sirte yesterday.

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