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Heavy fighting for Tripoli as EU fears banned militants among defenders

▶ Among forces battling Libyan National Army are groups wanted for killing US ambassador in 2012

- JOHN PEARSON

The Libyan capital Tripoli shuddered yesterday under heavy artillery bombardmen­t and air strikes as Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army sought to break through opposition lines in the southern suburbs.

Fighting was concentrat­ed on a broad section of the city, with LNA tank and infantry units probing for weak points against a front line held by an assortment of militias aligned to the UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA).

Photos and video circulatin­g on social media show LNA tanks bearing machine guns in action against militia strong points in densely packed parts of the city. Fighting was reportedly heaviest in an area around the former internatio­nal airport in the south-west of the city. Several kilometres east, an LNA jet was reported by witnesses to have hit a militia base in the suburb of Tajoura.

A statement on the LNA’s Twitter account said offensives had been launched from seven points in a fresh attempt to capture the city in an offensive that began on April 4.

“For the ninth day, your Libyan Arab armed forces are advancing from seven main axes towards the capital to secure it and to defeat the terrorist and criminal militias in Libya,” said the LNA statement. “Your forces are creating victory and crushing terrorism.”

On Friday, the LNA said: “Our air force operations will increase in the coming hours.” That seemed to be a reference to air strikes on Friday against a militia base at Zuwara, west of Tripoli near the Tunisian border, and a strike at Tripoli’s city centre Mitiga airport. No details of casualties were reported.

On the front lines, the LNA is wrestling with the problem of battering its way through militia strongpoin­ts. The city militias have blocked roads, including the main airport route to the city centre, with earth ramparts and shipping containers. Field Marshal Haftar is the armed forces commander for the House of Representa­tives parliament based in eastern Libya, and yesterday it formally moved location from Tobruk to Benghazi, eastern Libya’s biggest city. Opening the session, Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh voiced his support for the LNA Tripoli offensive saying that delayed elections could follow the capture of the capital.

“We need to get rid of militias and terrorist groups,” Mr Saleh said. “We assure the residents of Tripoli that the campaign to liberate Tripoli will be limited. We will be going to the polls after liberating Tripoli.”

The United Nations has made an appeal for elections central to its continuing Libya peace efforts but its officials want such polls held without violence. On the diplomatic front, Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte yesterday repeated calls also made by the UN for a Tripoli ceasefire, warning “there is a serious risk that a humanitari­an crisis mounts. A military option cannot be a solution”.

A complicati­on for diplomats trying to negotiate a ceasefire is the presence, among the GNA militias, of leaders sanctioned for militant activities by the UN. The New York Times reported that these militias include the Benghazi Defence Brigades, units originally from the city of the same name, who include elements blamed by the US for the killing of US ambassador Chris Stevens in Benghazi in 2012.

The newspaper said two other militia commanders fighting on the side of the GNA are also on UN sanctions lists. The presence of such individual­s is likely to complicate UN diplomatic support for the GNA.

On Thursday night, the European Union acknowledg­ed the presence of the sanctioned militias, saying member states “express their concern at the involvemen­t of terrorist and criminal elements in the fighting, including individual­s listed by the UN Security Council”. Supporters of Field Marshal Haftar say the objective of the Tripoli offensive is to defeat militias, restoring law and order to the city.

Amid a worsening humanitari­an situation, World Health Organisati­on representa­tive Dr Syed Jaffar Hussain said five ambulances had been hit in the fighting and warned the body had only stockpiled two weeks’ worth of medical supplies in Tripoli.

The United Nations High Commission­er for Refugees is meanwhile trying to relocate 1,500 migrants and refugees in detention centres near the front lines.

“They must be urgently brought to safety,” said its spokesman Filippo Grandi. “Simply put, this is a matter of life or death.”

Libyan Arab armed forces are advancing towards the capital to secure it and to defeat the terrorist and criminal militias LIBYAN NATIONAL ARMY

 ?? AFP ?? Forces loyal to Libya’s Government of National Accord during clashes in the suburb of Wadi Rabie 30 kilometres south of Tripoli
AFP Forces loyal to Libya’s Government of National Accord during clashes in the suburb of Wadi Rabie 30 kilometres south of Tripoli

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