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Spectre of ISIL means Sirte will not rest

Militias who pushed extremists from Libyan coastal city wary of how fragile and fleeting their alliances may be

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TUNIS // As ISIL’s defences crumbled across their Libyan stronghold of Sirte, dozens of women and children who were used as human shields stumbled from the rubble and the fighters who defeated the extremists flew Libyan flags over the Mediterran­ean hometown of late dictator Muammar Qa- ddafi. But the celebratio­ns were short- lived. Far from unifying the country, the six- month campaign has proved a trigger for ISIL counter-attacks and renewed fighting among Libya’s military factions.

Hours after the last district in Sirte was cleared, fighters in a newly-formed force swept up from the desert south of the city towards Libya’s Oil Crescent, aiming to recapture ports that had changed hands three months earlier.

Tripoli has suffered its worst clashes for more than a year as the capital’s militias rolled tanks on to the streets in a feud infused with ideologica­l and political disputes.

In Benghazi, the self-styled Libyan National Army (LNA) continued suffering heavy casualties as it battled Islamist-led rivals after more than two years of warfare.

The government based in Tripoli looks increasing­ly helpless, despite the United Nations and the West backing it as the only path towards peace.

Martin Kobler, the UN’s Libya envoy, told the Security Council this week that with the stalling of a year-old peace plan, weapons were still being delivered to Libya, the economy was facing meltdown, and the country remained a “human marketplac­e” for migrants trying to reach Europe.

Any gains against militants in Sirte and Benghazi were “not irreversib­le”, he said. The Sirte campaign was led by brigades from Misurata, a key port east of Tripoli. They launched their offensive in May when militants advanced up the coast towards their city.

The UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) scrambled to take command, but only ever had nominal control over fighters, some of whom had ambitions beyond the campaign.

Attacks by ISIL snipers, suicide bombers and mines dragged the battle out for months.

Following the GNA’s formal request for air support, nearly 500 strikes were carried out over Sirte between August 1 and early this month.

After the last buildings in Sirte’s Ghiza Bahriya neighbourh­ood were secured on Tuesday, jubilant fighters paraded through the streets, chanting that the deaths of more than 700 men from within their ranks had not been in vain.

In Misurata, however, where the fighting force rose out of a 2011 uprising, there was no sense of triumph.

“Every time after we win a war we celebrate,” said Ahmed Algennabi, 28, a salesman in a Misurata perfume shop. “But now I don’t think that it’s the end of this war, and I expect more fighting against ISIL.”

Fears of ISIL retaliatio­n or an insurgency has prevented an official declaratio­n of an end to the operation in Sirte.

Libyan security officials said a significan­t number of militants left Sirte either before the battle or in its early stages, regrouping in ISIL cells along Libya’s western coast and in the hinterland.

They attacked from behind the front lines with suicide bombings and a major ambush even as the fighting raged in residentia­l neighbourh­oods in Sirte.

Military officials said they would deal with this threat by securing the desert valleys south of Sirte and chasing down fugitive militants.

But they are also nervous about Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, the commander of the LNA in the east.

Since 2014, he has sided with forces opposed to the Misurata brigades in a stop-start national conflict and has recently made significan­t military advances of his own. In September, with Misurata’s fighters still tied up in Sirte, his forces seized the Oil Crescent ports. Many believed his aim was national power.

With no state control, any patriotic feeling arising from the Sirte victory is unlikely to last, said Libyan analyst Tarek Megerisi.

“Now it’s over it’s just back to business as usual, because none of the divisions have been healed, none of the drivers of conflict have been stopped or put on hold,” he said.

“Everyone’s just been manoeuvrin­g, waiting for this to end, so that they can return to their power struggle.”

‘ Now it’s over it’s just back to business as usual, because none of the divisions have been healed Tarek Megerisi Libyan analyst

 ?? AFP ?? Forces loyal to Libya’s UN-backed government in the former ISIL bastion of Sirte during a clean-up operation on Thursday.
AFP Forces loyal to Libya’s UN-backed government in the former ISIL bastion of Sirte during a clean-up operation on Thursday.

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