The National - News

Doha ‘has destabilis­ed Libya’

Eastern army chief says Qataris deployed fighters and financed radicals in an effort to thwart its transition to democracy

- The National staff The LNA spokesman Twitter account. foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Libya’s eastern army has accused Qatar of deploying forces in the country and financing radical groups over several years, hindering its transition to democracy.

Libyan National Army ( LNA) spokesman Colonel Ahmed Al Mismari presented documents and videos at a press conference in eastern Libya on Wednesday which he said confirmed Qatari deployment­s in Libya and its support for radical forces opposed to the LNA.

The claim followed a declaratio­n on Monday by the Al Bayda-based interim government, which supervises the LNA and is opposed to the UN- backed Government of National Accord in Tripoli, that it was formally breaking diplomatic relations with Qatar, without citing a reason.

The announceme­nt came after Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bahrain and Egypt said they were breaking ties with Qatar over its support for “terrorist groups aiming to destabilis­e the region”. The documents presented by Col Al Mismari include a letter he said was from Mohammed Hamad Al Hajri, acting charge d’affaires at the Qatar embassy in Libya, which the colonel said proved Qatar has deployed units in the country.

The letter, which appeared to be written on headed notepaper with an official Qatari embassy crest, referred to an incident in 2012 when three Qatari men – supposedly in Libya on a hunting trip – were stopped at a checkpoint and then confined to their hotel.

The letter said the embassy provided consular assistance and subsequent­ly the under-secretary at the Libyan ministry for foreign affairs apologised to the Qatari ambassador for the “misunderst­anding”.

Yesterday, Col Al Mismari told the Libyan news site Al Awsat that the House of Representa­tives (HOR), the eastern parliament that supervises the LNA and the government in Al Bayda, should annul contracts with oil companies associated with Qatar. He said Qatar had “destroyed the Arab region and there is no hope for reconcilia­tion”.

Col Al Mismari said the documents showed the involvemen­t of prominent Qataris in fuelling disputes in Libya, and the deployment of Qatar’s military in attempts by its allied forces to take over locations, including the Mitiga airport in Tripoli’s city centre and the western coastal town of Misurata. Qatar has not commented on the LNA allegation­s, but on March 8 it denied claims by Libyan parliament­arians that it was supporting radical forces fighting the LNA for control of oil ports Es Sider and Ras Lanuf. The LNA spokesman also accused Qatar- backed Libyan radical militias of being behind an attempt to assassinat­e LNA commander Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, and also a series of assassinat­ions of prominent leaders, including Abdel Fattah Younes, LNA chief of staff during the 2011 revolution, who was murdered in Benghazi in July that year.

The spokesman also presented videos showing what he said were extremists supported by Qatar who held prominent positions in Libya, including the former mayor of Tripoli and radical fighter Mahdi Al Harati.

Mr Al Harati, a former Arab-language teacher in Ireland, led the co-called Tripoli Brigade, one of the rebel forces that ousted Libya’s former leader Muammar Qaddafi in the 2011 revolution.

The following year he set up a rebel brigade in Syria to battle the forces of Syrian president Bashar Al Assad, leaving six months later to return to Tripoli, where he was elected mayor in 2014. The UN Security Council’s Panel of Experts, set up to monitor the UN arms embargo on Libya, wrote in its annual report in March 2013: “During its first mandate (2011-2012), the panel was informed by the Libyan opposition military authoritie­s and confidenti­al sources that Qatar was providing military material to the revolution­ary forces through the organisati­on of a large number of flights and the deliveries of a range of arms and ammunition”.

Qatar replied to the allegation, saying it had deployed troops in Libya to protect civilians during the revolution, but denied that any weapons had intentiona­lly found their way to rebels.

In a January 2013 letter to the panel, the permanent mission of the state of Qatar wrote that Qatar had deployed troops during the 2011 revolution to protect civilians under the terms of UN resolution­s of that year. “Thus it dispatched a limited number of military personnel to Libya to provide consultati­on to the revolution­aries, defend Libyan civilians and protect aid convoys destined for them. It supplied those Qatari military personnel with limited arms and ammunition for the purpose of self defence.”

In the same letter, published by the panel in its 2013 report, Qatar’s permanent mission said: “The state of Qatar categorica­lly denies the informatio­n reported by some media that it supplied the revolution­aries with arms and ammunition. If some ammunition found its way to some Libyan revolution­aries, despite measures taken to prevent this, then this could only be explained by the conditions of fierce fighting.”

Libyan militias that the LNA accuses Qatar of financing have suffered defeats on the battlefiel­d in recent weeks. On March 10, LNA forces ejected radical militias from Es Sider and Ras Lanuf, and in May the army captured two southern airbases and the central base of Jufra from militias. The LNA has also captured most of Benghazi from radicals, including ISIL, pushing them back into two coastal enclaves.

 ?? Esam Omran Al Fetori / Reuters ?? Colonel Ahmed Al Mismari presented documents and videos which, he claimed, demonstrat­ed that Qatari forces had been meddling in Libyan affairs.
Esam Omran Al Fetori / Reuters Colonel Ahmed Al Mismari presented documents and videos which, he claimed, demonstrat­ed that Qatari forces had been meddling in Libyan affairs.
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