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Libya's east based army claims control of most of country

Just Earth News | @justearthnews | 13 Feb 2020, 12:47 am Print

Libya's east based army claims control of most of country

Tripoli/Xinhua: Libya's east based army spokesman Ahmad al-Mismari said on Wednesday that it has gained control of majority of Libyan territories, even as the armed conflict with the rival United Nations backed government continues.

"The Libyan Arab Armed Forces control 99 percent of the country, either by having areas where our forces are physically present or by having areas in the range of our air force or artillery," al Mismari, told a press conference on Wednesday in the eastern city Benghazi.

"The army is committed to the ceasefire, but still has the right to firmly respond to any breach of the ceasefire, which explains the clashes that occur from time to time between our forces and terrorist groups," he said.

The spokesman also said that the main problem in the country is not economic or political, but is essentially a security problem "caused by militias and terrorists that control certain parts of the country".

"We aim to eliminate terrorism, dismantle militias and take control of all weapons in the country," he said.

Responding to a statement issued by the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) on Wednesday, in which the Mission said the east based army refused to grant permission to its planes to land in Libya, al Mismari said, that the UNSMIL's planes are "welcome to land in any airport in Libya."

He said the reason the army did not grant permission for the airplanes to land in the capital Tripoli's Mitiga International Airport because the airport is "fully controlled by a Turkish military commander, who is responsible for giving such permission."

The east based army had been leading a military campaign since April 2019 in and around Tripoli, attempting to take over the capital city from the UN backed government.

The fighting has killed and injured thousands of people and forced more than 150,000 civilians to flee their homes.

The rivals agreed to a ceasefire on Jan 12, but both parties accused each other of breaching the truce.