Libya’s Health Ministry said fighting in the capital Tripoli between rival militias has left 13 people dead.
The ministry said late Friday that 52 people were injured in the
fighting which flared up Wednesday, shattering a UN-brokered cease-fire
reached in September that ended hostilities in the city.
The earlier bout of violence killed nearly 100 people.
In a statement, the ministry appealed to rival militiamen not to target ambulances and medics.
The fighting between militias allied to the UN-backed government in
Tripoli and an armed group from a nearby town underscores Libya’s
lingering lawlessness since the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed
Muammar Qaddafi.
Al-Qaeda and Daesh have been using southern Libya as a base for attacks
in Libya and neighboring countries, exploiting a security vacuum since
2011.
Meanwhile, Eastern Libyan forces have said they had killed a senior
Al-Qaeda figure in southern Libya, during an operation to secure oil and
gas assets and fight militants in the lawless south.
The Libyan National Army (LNA) faction said it killed Abu Talha Al-Libi,
a commander in Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM), and two other
militants near the city of Sabha, LNA spokesman Ahmed Mismari said.
The energy-rich North African nation is governed by rival authorities in
Tripoli and the country’s east, each of which is backed by an array of
militias.
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