The National - News

Fighting rages in Tripoli as militias contest hotel complex

- John Pearson Foreign Correspond­ent foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Fighting broke out yesterday across the Libyan capital, Tripoli, with rival militias exchanging artillery and small arms fire.

Residents reported shells and rockets raining down, with tanks on the streets and the city’s Al Khadra hospital, in the firing line, having to be evacuated. The chaos meant hospitals had no reliable casualty figures.

The offensive was launched by militias supporting a former prime minister, Khalifa Ghweil, a rival to Tripoli’s UN-backed Government of National Accord.

Explosions and rocket fire rumbled through the Abu Slim, Al Hadhba and Salaheddin districts in the south of the city as militias fought for the luxury Rixos hotel.

Until March, the Rixos and nearby villas were the headquarte­rs for Mr Ghweil’s Salvation Government, a rival to the GNA.

The United Nations special representa­tive for Libya, Martin Kobler, said he was watching the Tripoli fighting with “grave concern” and issued an appeal for calm. “Political aims must not be pursued through violence,” he said. Residents reported random shells and rockets landing on homes, while thick black smoke rose from the Rixos complex. Mr Ghweil was ousted from power when the GNA took office in March last year, but tried a coup last November, setting up headquarte­rs at the Rixos.

In March, militias backing the GNA captured the Rixos complex, but conflict between militias backing the rival government­s has simmered since.

It is not clear what role the arrest, by pro-GNA forces, of Ramadan Abedi and Hashem Abedi, father and son of Manchester bomber Salman, played in the current violence. Both men were detained on Tuesday.

The battle in Tripoli came with further fighting elsewhere in the country, between pro-GNA militias and the Libyan National Army (LNA) commanded by Field Marshall Khalifa Haftar and loyal to a third rival government, the House of Representa­tives in Tobruk.

This month, militias killed 141 LNA soldiers, many of them cadets, after capturing the southern airbase of Brak Al Shati in what the army said was a massacre. Human rights groups said they have evidence of executions and the killings have set back hopes of a peace accord after meetings between Field Marshall Haftar and GNA prime minister Fayez Al Serraj.

The GNA insists it did not command units responsibl­e for the attack and has promised an investigat­ion. On Wednesday, LNA units, who control much of eastern Libya, strengthen­ed their position in southern Libya,consolidat­ing their hold on Brak Al Shati and capturing a second airbase, Tamenhint.

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