The Daily Telegraph

UK mercenarie­s ‘involved in failed mission to Libya’

- Roland Oliphant Gareth Browne By and

SIX British citizens, including two former Royal Marine commandos, have been accused of taking part in a botched mercenary mission to Libya to fight on behalf of the renegade general Khalifa Haftar.

The five men and one woman are named in a confidenti­al report by the United Nations panel of experts on Libya into a failed mission that ended with the mercenarie­s making a remarkable escape by sea after falling out with their hosts.

The men, including former Royal Marines Sean Callaghan Louw and Andrew Scott Ritchie, were among around 20 mercenarie­s who travelled to Benghazi in eastern Libya in June 2019 in a contract organised by a Uae-based company called Opus, according to the report seen by The Daily Telegraph.

Amanda Perry, a Uae-based businesswo­man, is alleged to have been a “facilitato­r” of the project. She is the managing director of Opus Capital Asset FZE, the company that hired two boats used by the group.

She is also company secretary of Lancaster 6, a business owned by Christiaan Durrant, a former Australian fighter pilot and Malta resident who is also named – and accused of being a facilitato­r in the report.

The cover story for their mission, called “Project Opus”, was a geophysica­l and hyperspect­ral survey of Jordan.

As the report says, UN investigat­ors believe that that they had been hired by General Haftar’s Libyan National Army to fly assault helicopter­s and use fast speedboats to intercept and search merchant vessels ferrying Turkish weapons to Tripoli.

The project cost nearly $18 million (£14.7m) and involved 25 individual­s from six countries, tasked with providing “armed assault rotary wing aviation (including six ex-military helicopter­s and at least one Cobra attack helicopter), maritime interdicti­on... a Fusion and Targeting Cell with a cyber capability at Benina airport and UAV capabiliti­es”, according to a summary of the report seen by The Telegraph.

The group deployed on June 27 2019. But something seems to have gone wrong: on July 2 the entire group made an extraordin­ary 350-mile escape by sea in two rigid inflatable boats.

They were questioned by police and released without charge on their arrival in Malta. The report does not say who bankrolled the mission, but says arrangemen­ts involved at least 10 companies based in the British Virgin Islands, Malta and the UAE.

While no charges have been brought, the panel said they were considerin­g “statements of case” to consider sanctionin­g individual­s/entities involved in the operation.

Ms Perry said when asked for comment: “I have nothing to say and the allegation­s are false and damaging.”

Mr Louw, who now runs a military fitness company in Crawley, and Mr Ritchie, a former Royal Marine corporal of 10 years, from Oban, did not respond to requests for comment.

Gen Haftar, who controls large swathes of Libya, launched an assault on Tripoli in a bid to overthrow the Unrecognis­ed government of national unity in April 2019, two months before the alleged operation took place.

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