'Significant' fatalities after rival clashes at Libyan airbase

'Significant' fatalities after rival clashes at Libyan airbase
The UN envoy to Libya voiced alarm at reports of "significant" fatalities in an attack by militia loyal to the unity government on Brak al-Shati base controlled by rival forces.
3 min read
19 May, 2017
There were reportedly a number of casualties in LNA ranks [Getty]

At least 60 people were killed as rival Libyan forces clashed at a southern air base on Thursday.

Members of the Third Force militia loyal to the UN-backed Government of National Accord in Tripoli attacked an airbase used by military strongman Khalifa Haftar's self-proclaimed Libyan National Army (LNA), military sources said.

There was no independent word on casualties in the assault on the Brak al-Shati base, 650 kilometres (400 miles) south of Tripoli, but Libyan media reported at least 60 dead.

Both the GNA and defence ministry condemned Thursday's attack and said they had not ordered any such action, vowing to investigate and sanction those responsible.

The town's mayor, Ibrahim Zami, described some of the killings as a "slaughter".

The UN envoy to Libya voiced alarm on Friday at reports of the "significant" fatalities.

"I am outraged by reports of significant numbers of fatalities, including civilians and by reports that summary executions may have taken place," UN envoy Martin Kobler said in a statement.

The unity government, the rival administration in eastern Libya and their respective backers are battling for influence in the North African country which has been wracked by chaos since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

The LNA does not recognise the authority of the GNA, and instead supports the rival authorities based in the east.

Britain's ambassador to Libya, Peter Millett, also denounced the airbase assault.

"Disgusted by attack on Brak al-Shati & reports of mass executions. Perpetrators must be brought to justice," he wrote on Twitter.

The incident at the Brak base in Wadi al-Shati district comes a month after an attack by the LNA on the Tamenhant airbase controlled by the Third Force near the south's main city of Sebha.

That attack was called off after a reconciliation meeting between Haftar and unity government head Fayez al-Sarraj in Abu Dhabi on May 2.

The speaker of the eastern-based parliament, which is supported by the LNA, accused the Misrata-based Third Force of a "serious breach of the truce agreement reached in Abu Dhabi".

Aguila Saleh said there were a "number of martyrs" in LNA ranks, without giving a figure.

The speaker said he had given orders for the armed forces "to take the measures necessary to respond to the assault and defend the south and cleanse it of all outlaw militias".

In Tripoli, the GNA called for an immediate ceasefire in the south, where tribes and militias vie for control of lucrative smuggling routes with neighbouring Chad, Niger and Sudan.

"We hope reason will prevail and that the escalation and provocation will stop," it said.

The unity government's defence ministry laid the blame on "those who started bombing Tamenhant base with warplanes and tanks", referring to Haftar's forces.

In fresh violence on Friday, a pro-Haftar tribal chief, Sheikh Ibrayek Alwati, and five other people including a child were killed in a car bombing outside a mosque in the eastern city of Slouq, medical and security sources said.