Monday, August 25, 2014
Islamist militants seize control of Libyan capital
Smoke fills the sky over Tripoli after fighting between rival militias. Photograph: EPA/STR
Libya
lurched closer to fragmentation and civil war at the weekend after
Islamist-led militias seized the airport in the capital, proclaimed
their own government and presented the world with another crisis.
Operation
Dawn, a coalition of Islamist and Misrata forces, captured the airport
on Saturday in fierce fighting against pro-government militias after a
five-week siege that has battered parts of Tripoli. Television images
showed bearded militias dancing on wrecked airliners, firing machine
guns in the air and chanting “allah o Akbar” (God is great).
Yesterday,
they set the airport buildings ablaze, apparently intending to destroy
rather than hold it. The victory, which secures Islamist control over
Tripoli, was a culmination of weeks of fighting triggered by elections
in July which Islamist parties lost. Rather than accept the result,
Islamist leaders accused the new parliament of being dominated by
supporters of former dictator Muammar Gadafy, and have sought to restore
the old national congress.
“The general national congress will
hold an emergency meeting in Tripoli to save the country,” said
congress spokesman Omar Ahmidan.
Libya’s official
parliament, the House of Representatives, in the eastern city of Tobruk,
denounced the attack as illegal, branding Dawn a “terrorist
organisation” and announcing a “state of war” against the group. The
move leaves Libya with two governments, one in Tripoli, one in the east
of the country, battling for the hearts and minds of the country’s
myriad militias.
There are few regular forces for
the government to call on, with prime minister Abdullah al-Thani needing
to persuade nationalist and tribal militias to try to recapture the
capital.
Dawn militias are consolidating their
hold on the capital by rounding up government sympathisers and people
from Zintan, whose militia defended the airport. “Units from Gharyan and
Abu Salem are circling the area looking for any Zintani they can find,”
said one frightened resident hiding in the city.
Fighting
continues to the west of Tripoli while Islamist brigades in Benghazi,
643km east, are battling with army units and nationalist militias.
– (Guardian service)
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