The Mail on Sunday

Revealed: top secret British police op to stop refugee boat jihadis . . . scuppered by Libya

- From BARBARA JONES IN TRIPOLI Additional reporting: Ned Donovan

A TOP-SECRET operation by British agents in Libya to stop terrorists being smuggled into Europe by people-trafficker­s has been shut down after an assault by government militia.

The notorious Nawasi Brigade stormed the operations base in Tripoli of the UK’s National Crime Agency (NCA) – dealing a devastatin­g blow to efforts to prevent terror attacks in Europe, highly placed sources in Libya have told The Mail on Sunday.

Hard-line jihadis and gangsters who make up the militia are now the nominal coastguard security – but, in fact, are working with peoplesmug­glers for a cut of their vast income.

Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj – head of the Government of National Unity recognised by the United Nations – is powerless to defy the Nawasi Brigade, one of three militias that control Tripoli.

Three NCA intelligen­ce officers had made dozens of reconnaiss­ance visits over many months to the port complex in the city, where they had been working alongside police in the search for jihadis on a terror watch-list.

The NCA had planned to set up a large-scale operation involving British personnel and using cutting-edge surveillan­ce technology later this year. The agency had recently applied to Libya’s Ministry of the Interior for the green light to start its counter-terrorism deployment in the country full-time.

Its mission had become even more urgent after the Manchester bombing in May, in which Salman Abedi killed 22 concert-goers. British-born Abedi was of Libyan origin and is believed to have received terrorist training in the country.

Security services fear that terrorists are making their way into Europe hidden among migrants – they take flimsy boats from Libya to reach Italy, from where they can travel elsewhere on the Continent. Already this year more than 100,000 migrants have crossed the Mediterran­ean.

While many will plead asylum as refugees from war or human-rights abuses, the vast majority are economic migrants, according ng to the United Nations. Two of the terrorists who took part in the November 2015 Paris attacks, in which 130 people were murdered, slipped into Europe using forged passports, hiding among the flood of refugees from the war in Syria.

Coastguard officials, angered by the loss of an opportunit­y to work closely with the British, told The Mail on Sunday: ‘The NCA team came over to Tripoli after the Manchester bombing and agreed that we might have been able to prevent that atrocity if our joint operations HQ had been up and running.’

The Nawasi Brigade gunmen n stormed the port complex inn Tripoli on July 19. Arriving inn armoured vehicles, they threat- ened police staff with machinegun­s, shouting: ‘Get out! Get out! We have taken over!’

More than 70 police officers were forced to leave immediatel­y, and forbidden to take any files or equipment. A senior police officer who witnessed the attack said: ‘We know these men. They work with the people-trafficker­s and make money from smuggling African migrants on to boats. They call themselves protectors of public morals, but they are nothing but a bunch of gangsters, opportunis­ts.

‘Some of them wore combat gear. Others, the religious ones, wore jalabiyas, the traditiona­l robes. They are powerful in Tripoli and the government is weak and hopeless. We informed Prime Minister Fayez alSarraj, but he said he knew nothing, he had been out of the country. In reality he is terrified of the Nawasi Brigade and the other militias.’

The NCA has protested to the European Union Borders Assistance Mission to Libya (EUBAM).

A delegation of three senior officers from Britain had been working with Libyan police chiefs to draw up plans for a base where they would use state-of-the-art technology to face-match terrorists on their wanted lists with those in Libyan detention centres, and inter- cept phone calls between trafficker­s. On previous visits, the officers have combed through files to detect terrorists among the criminals arrested for traffickin­g of drugs, people and fuel, which are all rife along the coast of Libya.

The NCA officers have had access to trafficker­s and illegal migrants at detention centres, where they were able to interrogat­e them and assess the scale of the threat to Britain.

British interventi­on in the humantraff­icking crisis in Libya has never been more needed. Last week, Scotland Yard Deputy Assistant Commission­er Neil Basu warned that UK border checks were a weak point for national security at a time when 600 extremist plots were being investigat­ed.

Italian authoritie­s, infuriated by Libya’s inability to halt the migrant crisis, which has seen 600,000 people clambering on to its shores in the past four years, are already taking matters into their own hands.

They called a halt to EU plans to t rain Libyan coastguard­s and return six patrol boats they have held since the 2011 revolution, and instead sent a warship bristling with weapons to drop anchor off the Libyan coastline last month.

Italy’s Defence Minister Roberta Pinotti has threatened to send up

‘Get out, get out! We have taken over!’

to five more warships. But Italy’s proactive measures are not being welcomed, least of all by the police force run out of the coastal headquarte­rs by the Nawasi Brigade. A source said: ‘We are totally against this aggressive action by Italy, our former colonial masters. We are told that al-Sarraj asked for their assistance but if so he has acted

‘They’re nothing but a bunch of gangsters’

alone, disempower­ing us at the very time that our offices have been taken over by criminals.’

General Khalifa Haftar, the selfstyled head of the Libyan National Army, who leads an alternativ­e national government in eastern Libya, immediatel­y issued orders to all of the country’s naval bases ‘to confront any marine unit entering Libyan waters without permission of the army’.

In the chaotic aftermath of Libya’s 2011 revolution, the hastily formed National Transition­al Council invited in the armed militias which helped to defeat dictator Muammar Gaddafi, and gave them govern- ment salaries and status. There are currently about 250,000 armed former revolution­aries operating in the country.

In March, the Nawasi Brigade was tasked by al- Sarraj’s Presidenti­al Council to separate warring factions of two other militias in Tripoli. Muslim Brotherhoo­d factions currently control the Central Bank, which receives the country’s oil revenue and disburses government funds.

The European Council on Foreign Relations, an internatio­nal think-tank which conducts independen­t research and promotes debate within European countries, warns that migration through Libya is increasing.

Matthia Toaldo, senior policy fellow for the Middle East and North Africa, said: ‘Policies in Libya are facing stalemate. It is a dismal picture, though a significan­t component was to build up the capacity of Libya’s coastguard.’

This optimistic note has now been snuffed out by the crushing of the NCA’s initiative.

An NCA spokesman said: ‘ The NCA does not routinely confirm or deny operationa­l activity.’

An EU spokesman said: ‘We are aware of this incident.’

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