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Western Libya forces dislodge warlord Haftar from Tripoli airport after ground offensive

Fighters loyal to the internationally recognised Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli: AFP via Getty Images
Fighters loyal to the internationally recognised Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli: AFP via Getty Images

Armed forces loyal to Libya’s internationally recognised government announced the capture of capital's main airport on Wednesday hours after launching an offensive to push out fighters of a renegade military commander.

The fighting came despite a surging coronavirus pandemic and an agreement to restart peace talks.

Video footage posted to the internet showed fighters in mismatched camouflage uniforms firing on presumed enemy positions and lumbering through grasslands on the dusty outskirts of the sprawling civilian airport complex.

“Allahu akbar!” a fighter cried while opening fire on a military vehicle that appears to come apart, and then shooting the man who emerges from it. Other footage showed fighters joyously embracing as they traipsed through airport hangers.

Once the main air link to the capital, the airport lies on the southern edge of the capital, Tripoli, and has been hotly contested since military officer Khalifa Haftar began a campaign 14 months ago to seize the capital from the Government of National Accord (GNA). It has not been used since 2014 after a fierce burst of fighting between rival militias left the main terminal and numerous planes badly damaged. But the site is strategically important, a large swath real estate in the capital, and it's loss marks a major defeat for Mr Haftar, who serves as a proxy for Arab dictators in the Persian Gulf as well as the Kremlin, against a UN-brokered government backed by Turkey.

The battle for the airport comes just weeks after Mr Haftar suffered another defeat when he lost control of the al-Wattiya military airbase to the southwest of the capital. It also coincides with misery enveloping the country over the coronavirus pandemic which has spread from the country’s northwest to the impoverished south. At least five people have died in Libya due to Covid-19 and 182 have been infected, but two emergency room physicians in Tripoli have told The Independent they suspect the number is higher.

The airport takeover came two days after both sides agreed to renew peace talks, stalled following a 19 January international conference on Libya in Berlin, and as the GNA deputy prime minister Ahmed Maiteeg arrived in Moscow for talks.

GNA forces had been for weeks attempting push into the airport. In advance of Wednesday's ground offensive, the Tripoli government launched at least five airstrikes against Haftar positions in the airport on Tuesday, the first since a 21 May deal between Turkey and Russia limiting air attacks.

“We officially announce the start of the airport liberation battle,” Mohammed Qanunu, spokesman for the Tripoli government’s armed forces, announced on Facebook. “Our instructions to our heroic forces are to move forward and chase the remnants of Haftar’s fleeing terrorist militias from inside Tripoli airport.”``

By evening Mr Qanunu claimed that GNA had "chased off the remnants" of Haftar's forces and declared full control of the airport site.

GNA fighters pictured during clashes with Khalifa Haftar’s forces in an area south of Tripoli (AFP via Getty Images)
GNA fighters pictured during clashes with Khalifa Haftar’s forces in an area south of Tripoli (AFP via Getty Images)

The war has taken a tremendous toll on civilians. On Tuesday, the monitoring group Airwars and the New America Foundation think tank released a report concluding that Mr Haftar had launched more than 1,000 airstrikes last year on the capital, a city of 1.5 million.

Adding to the burdens is confusion among civilians about where the frontline lies and when the fighting will reach their districts. At least 611 civilians were killed in airstrikes by various forces in Libya since 2012 and as many as 899, according to the report.

“Every night I still hear weapons firing,” a Tripoli emergency room physician who lives 6 miles from the airport said in a recent interview. “Honestly, you don’t know when the fighting is going to stop and when it’s going to start.”

Aided by the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, Russia and France, Mr Haftar was winning the war until late last year when Turkey intervened on behalf of the GNA.

Now, the tables have turned, and with the help of Turkish combat drones, anti-aircraft systems, and Nato-caliber battle planning, the GNA is on the offensive, even as it publicly agrees to continue steps to solidify a truce deal that has been flouted by both sides.

The United Nations on Monday called on “all the parties to empower their representatives in the negotiations to finalise the ceasefire agreement” – but both sides appeared ready to fight on. At stake is not only influence over Libya, but access to massive deposits of natural gas beneath the eastern Mediterranean that are being contested by Turkey, Greece, Cyprus and Israel.

European Union officials have cried foul as Turkey this week began drilling for gas in the eastern Mediterranean as part of a maritime deal signed with the Tripoli government that gives Ankara rights to large swathes of the sea but is not recognised by any other littoral nation.

“Our country’s rights, relations and interests on land, at sea and in the air will continue to be protected without any concession,” Turkey’s National Security Council said in a statement issued Tuesday night.

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