Libya air strikes against smugglers’ sites says government | ANG
  • April 20, 2024

Kenya investigates crash that killed military chief Francis Ogolla

Kenya’s government has sent a team to probe a helicopter crash that claimed the life of military chief Gen Francis Ogolla and nine others. The incident occurred shortly after takeoff in …

Health:WHO approves new cholera vaccine that could help fight surge in cases

As the world faces a shortage of cholera vaccines, the World Health Organization (WHO) has approved a new oral version of the inoculation. It is hoped that the easier-to-make vaccine will …

Zimbabwe frees prisoners, including those sentenced to death, in an independence day

Zimbabwe President Emmerson Mnangagwa granted clemency to more than 4,000 prisoners, including some who were on death row, in an independence day amnesty on Thursday. Zimbabwe marked 44 years of independence …

The UN-recognised government of national unity, based in the Libyan capital Tripoli, announced on Thursday that it had carried out air strikes against smugglers’ sites in the west of the country.

“Our national air force carried out (Thursday) morning precise and targeted air strikes against the hideouts of gangs of traffickers in fuel, drugs and human beings in the western coastal region”, the Ministry of Defence said in a statement on Thursday.

The strikes carried out on the “orders of the head of government”, Abdelhamid Dbeibah, “successfully hit their targets”, it added in the text published on the Facebook page of the ministry’s press office, which gave no further details of the locations targeted.

According to local media, the sites affected are on the outskirts of Zawiya, a coastal town 45 km west of the capital, which for several weeks has been the scene of clashes between armed groups engaged in human trafficking and other activities such as fuel smuggling.

No official figures have been released for the moment, but Libyan news websites have indicated that the strikes were carried out by drones, reporting material damage in the area of the port of al-Maya, a small seaside town around thirty kilometers west of the capital, and in the Abu-Sourra sector, south of Zawiya.

Since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi’s regime in 2011, Libya has been plunged into chaos and division, with a proliferation of armed groups often operating with impunity.

These groups are often singled out for their illegal activities, including the trafficking of migrants, taking advantage of the chaos reigning in the country.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *