UN action urged to end Tripoli unrest
Gutteres alarmed by increasing number of violations of ceasefire agreement
Libya’s internationally recognised government has called on the UN to take “concrete and effective” action to protect civilians and halt fighting near the capital that has killed more than 100 people since late August.
In a statement late on Friday, the Government of National Accord (GNA) called on the UN mission to “present the Security Council with the reality of the bloody events in Libya so that it can... protect the lives and property of civilians”.
Fighting slowed yesterurday morning a day after clashes left 15 dead and dozens more wounded, according to health ministry spokeswoman Wedad Abu Al Niran. The latest casualties brought the death toll to more than 100 since clashes erupted on the capital’s southern outskirts on August 26, according to the GNA body that deals with the wounded.
Respect truce
Despite a ceasefire deal reached on September 4, renewed fighting erupted last week, especially in the Salah Al Deen neighbourhood and on the road to Tripoli’s disused international airport, which was destroyed in 2014.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres was “alarmed by the increasing number of violations of the ceasefire agreement”, his spokesman said on Friday.
Guterres called on the militias to respect the truce and to “refrain from any actions that would increase the suffering of the civilian population”.