Libya calls for UN support amid clashes with militias

An Islamist Libyan militia on Sunday said it had captured the main airport in the capital Tripoli from a rival militia.

“The forces of Libya’s Dawn have been able to enter the airport after taking control of the strategic Naqlia base,” Alaa al-Heweik, a spokesperson for the militia, told independent Libyan broadcaster al-Nabaa. His claims could not be independently verified.

“Clashes are still going on at several other sites,” he added without elaborating.

The self-styled Libya’s Dawn militia is part of the Islamist-allied Misrata fighters’ movement, who have been trying since mid-July to seize the Tripoli International airport from the Zintan militia that is close to the country’s centrist political groups.

The newly-elected parliament has declared the Libya’s Dawn militia and its allied Ansar al-Sharia to be “terrorist and outlawed” groups.

“They are a legitimate target for the national Libyan army that we strongly support,” the parliament said in a statement.

The parliament also sacked chief of the army staff, Major General Abdel-Salam Gadallah, for failing to stop the Islamist militias’ advances in Tripoli.

Lawmakers, meeting late on Saturday in the eastern city of Tobruk, voted to appoint Colonel Abdel-Razeq al-Nazuri to the chief of army staff post.

Parliament Speaker Akila Saleh meanwhile renewed a call for the United Nations to intervene in Libya, which in recent months has seen its worst violence since Muammar Gaddafi was toppled in an armed revolt in 2011.

Check Also

Iran Update, April 21, 2024

The IDF concluded a major, multi-day “counterterrorism operation” in the Nour Shams Refugee Camp, Tulkarm, …