Khaleej Times

Libyans want armed militias out

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tripoli — Dozens of protesters marched in Libya’s capital on Friday, demonstrat­ing against the out-of-control militias plaguing the country after a late-night battle between two warring factions in Tripoli killed three people.

Protesters said they’d give militias stationed in the capital three days before marching on their headquarte­rs and forcing them out.

Raising banners that read “Tripoli without weaponry.” protesters called upon the interim government to implement an earlier decision to bring the militias under control. The militias face an end-of-year deadline to disband or join the Libyan security forces, at the risk of losing their government salaries.

After the killing of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, former rebels formed armed groups to provide protection amid a security vacuum. They later mushroomed in number and now fight over power and influence.

The protests came after intense clashes erupted on Thursday night between two rival militias in the heart of Tripoli. The head of Tripoli City Council, Al Sadat al-Badri, told reporters that the clashes killed three people and left four others in critical condition. “There is a consensus among all that the capital is for everyone — but not militias,” he said. There will be “no developmen­t and no progress without emptying the capital of weapons.”

“We don’t want a small armed group control us,” he added.

The fighting on Thursday began after a militia commander from the western city of Misrata died of wounds he suffered in fighting earlier in the week. Dozens of Misrata militiamen, some riding in pickup trucks mounted with anti-aircraft guns, drove into Tripoli to attack their rivals. —

 ??  ?? Demonstrat­ors protest against armed militias as they welcome the arrival of the Libyan army in Benghazi. — Reuters
Demonstrat­ors protest against armed militias as they welcome the arrival of the Libyan army in Benghazi. — Reuters

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