The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Forces of east Libya strongman concede loss of oil export terminal

-

BENGHAZI: The forces of eastern Libya’s military strongman Khalifa Haftar have lost control of a key oil export terminal they had seized last year, a spokesman conceded yesterday.

Colonel Ahmad al-Mismari said that the rival forces had overrun the main airfield in the oil port of Ras Lanuf and identified them as Islamists of the Benghazi Defence Brigades.

An array of forces, most of them loyal to the UN-backed government in Tripoli, have been involved in efforts to oust Haftar from the oil ports, whose seizure enabled him to pose a major challenge to its authority.

But the Tripoli government on Friday evening denied any involvemen­t in the renewed offensive on the oil ports, condemning it as a ‘military escalation’.

The forces involved in the latest assault are a mixture of Islamist militias, eastern tribes opposed to Haftar and members of the Petroleum Facilities Guard which controlled the ports before Haftar’s takeover.

“The attackers were armed with modern tanks and a radar to neutralise our air force,” Mismari said.

“But the battle is ongoing. The situation in the Oil Crescent remains under control.”

There are four ports along the Oil Crescent on the eastern part of the Gulf of Sirte which account for the lion’s share of Libya’s oil exports.

Haftar’s forces seized Zueitina, Brega, Ras Lanuf and Al-Sidra in a lightning offensive last September that dealt a major blow to the UN-backed Government of National Accord.

Haftar dominates a rival administra­tion based in the east that continues to defy the GNA’s authority.

He has backing from neighbouri­ng Egypt, from the United Arab Emirates and increasing­ly from Russia. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia