47 killed in clashes between Libya’s rival militias

Published July 22, 2014
Tripoli: A Libyan minister gestures as he inspects the destruction at the city’s airport on Monday.—AFP
Tripoli: A Libyan minister gestures as he inspects the destruction at the city’s airport on Monday.—AFP

CAIRO: Clashes between rival Libyan militias fighting for control of the capital’s international airport killed 47 people over the last week, Libya’s Health Ministry said, as violence in an eastern city killed five.

The weeklong battle in Tripoli began when Islamist-led militias--mostly from the western city of Misrata -- launched a surprise assault on the airport, under control of rival militias from the western mountain town of Zintan.The clashes resumed on Sunday after ceasefire efforts failed.

On Monday, the burned-out shell of an Airbus A330 sat on the tarmac, a $113 million passenger jet for Libya’s state-owned Afriqiyah Airways destroyed in the fighting. “This was the pride of the Libyan fleet,” Abdelkader Mohammed Ahmed, Libya’s transportation minister, told journalists at the airport. “This airplane used to fly to South Africa, Bangladesh and China. “Inside the airport, closed since last Monday, the fighting left holes in the ceiling and scattered bits of its roof strewn across the floor.

The ministry said on its website late on Sunday that the fighting killed 47 people and wounded 120. It also said it had not yet received the full casualty report.

Militias locked in deadly battle for Tripoli airport

Libya is witnessing one of its worst spasms of violence since the ouster of Moammar Qadhafi in 2011. All the militias fighting around the airport are on the government’s payroll since successive transitional authorities have depended on them to restore order.

The rival militias, made up largely of former rebels, have forced a weeklong closure of gas stations and government offices. In recent days, armed men have attacked vehicles carrying money from the Central Bank to local banks, forcing their closure. Libyan government officials and activists have increasingly been targeted in the violence.

Gunmen kidnapped two lawmakers in the western suburbs of Tripoli on Sunday, a parliament statement said. In Libya’s second-largest city of Benghazi, five troops were killed in an attack by Islamist militias on a barrack occupied by forces allied with Gen. Khalifa Hifter, a renegade general who has vowed to crush Islamic militias, a security official said. The assault early on Monday wounded 29, the official said. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to journalists.

In the past two days in Benghazi, the birthplace of anti-Qadhafi uprising, gunmen killed an army officer while he was driving home and a former special forces officer.

Meanwhile, a helicopter crashed in Benghazi while transporting cash to the eastern city of Bayda because of technical failure, according to a Joint Security Committee of Benghazi statement, posted on its official website. —AP

Published in Dawn, July 22nd, 2014

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