Libya: Bashaga and Dbeiba accuse each other of the bloody clashes

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In a speech, Dbeiba accused his opponents of following “foreign agendas”, calling them “criminals” and “coup d’etats”, who “brought war to the capital with tanks and heavy weapons”.

The two rival prime ministers in Libya they blamed each other for the conflicts between armed groups in Tripoli, of which 32 people were killed and another 159 were injured, while revived the war scenario.

Two governments are vying for power in Libya, which has been plunged into chaos since the overthrow of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011: Fathi Bashaga was appointed prime minister in February by parliament in Tobruk and has the support of eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar. Since then he has been trying, unsuccessfully, to enter Tripoli to take power and has recently threatened to resort to violence to succeed. Abdelhamid Dbeiba heads the transitional government from early 2021.

In a speech broadcast on the government’s Facebook page, Dbeiba accused his opponents of following “foreign agendas“, calling them “criminals” and “coup-makers”, who “they brought the war to the capital with tanks and heavy weapons».

We will bring to justice all those involved” to violence, he stressed, pledging to move some armed groups’ headquarters away from the center of Tripoli.

His opponent, Fati Basaga, accused Dbeiba, “his ruling family and his armed groups that they are responsible for the blood that has been spilled and that which will be spilled because of their obsession with money and power, which they want to maintain at all costs”.

Gunfire and shelling could be heard throughout the night on Friday and into the night on Saturday in several districts of the capital.

Although the fighting has stopped, the damage is visible everywhere in Tripoli: bullet-riddled buildings, some charred cars, while six hospitals were targeted.

“terrified”

According to the Ministry of Health, 32 people were killed and 159 were injured, including an unspecified number of civilians.

Rockets, rockets passed over our heads, between apartment buildings“, said 38-year-old Mohammad Abaya, a resident of Tripoli.

We were really terrified,” noted Lotfi Ben Razab, a retiree. “The fighting was extremely violent. A rocket landed in my neighbor’s living room, but thank God it didn’t explode».

Armed groups considered neutral in the bra-defer between Basaga and Dbeiba, notably the al-Radaa (deterrence) Force, sided with Dbeiba, playing a decisive role in the outcome of the clashes.

In a letter sent to the local press, Libya’s attorney general asked the passport office to ban Bashaga from traveling, as well as some of his ministers and the former head of the army’s intelligence service, Osama Zwili, a key ally. of Bashaga.

The Joint Operations Force, a powerful militia backing Dbeiba, announced that captured many “perpetrators” who participated in Bashaga’s failed attempt.

These latest clashes were unprecedented in scale after the failure in June 2020 of Marshal Haftar’s campaign to take the capital militarily at the height of the civil strife that followed the fall of Colonel Gaddafi’s regime.

This conflict is characterized by the rivalry between eastern and western Libya, power struggles, foreign interventions and fighting between armed groups.

“Endless”

The transitional government in Tripoli emerged through the UN-sponsored process, with the main mission of holding elections last December, but these were postponed indefinitely.

Deeming Dbeiba’s term expired, the parliament in eastern Libya appointed Bashaga prime minister in February. Dbeiba insists he will only hand over power to an elected government.

Yesterday, Sunday, the UN again called for a dialogue in order for Libya to get out of the political impasse and called for “violence is avoided.”

But the crisis is far from being resolved, with myriad militias operating in the country, constantly changing sides.

The armed groups that were on the same side of the fighting yesterday in Tripoli will clash tomorrow for territories, positions and money. The teams that supported Dbeiba yesterday will defy him tomorrow. This is a story without an endWolfram Lacher, a Libya expert at the German SWP institute, wrote on Twitter.

RES-EMP

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