Derna - Fatima al Saadawy
Extremist groups in Libya revealed the killing of leading member of Darna Shura Council Abu Mosaab Al Shaeri. Sources said that his body is currently existed in Harish Hospital, saying that he was killed during an airstrike conducted by Egypt’s air force.
Egypt said it carried out fresh airstrikes on the Islamist stronghold of Derna this morning in conjunction with the Libyan National Army (LNA).
It claimed there were no civilian casualties in the attacks, which reportedly included the town’s power station and electricity distribution network. The Egyptians said that they were striking at strategically important points held by the Derna Mujahedeen Shura Council (DMSC).
Egypt and the LNA have been targeting locations in Jufra as well as Derna over the last few days with 15 airstrikes unleashed on Friday. Cairo says its new air campaign is in retaliation for the so-called Islamic State (IS) attack that killed 30 in the Egyptian province of Minya on Friday. This, even though IS was ousted by the DMSC from Derna nearly two years ago.
At a press conference with his Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov in Cairo today, Egyptian foreign minister Sameh Shoukry said militant training camps in Libya were a huge threat to Egypt.
“Egypt targeted the bases of these organisations in order to get rid of them and to limit their ability to threaten Egypt’s national security. This is in full coordination with the Libyan National Army,” Shoukry said. This cooperation was confirmed by the LNA’s spokesman Colonel Ahmed Mismari.
The LNA’s air force said yesterday that Saturday’s strikes targeted Jufra airbase and an ammunition store in Hun. However, local officials in Hun said the strikes had also cut electricity to a number of neighbourhoods. The General Authority of Awqaf and Islamic Affairs was also reportedly hit.
Jufra airbase is controlled by the Misratan 13th Brigade, previously known as the Third Force, with support from the Benghazi Defence Brigades. When the LNA took Tamenhint airbase, 60km from Sebha, from Misratan and Islamist fighters last week Mismari said remnants of the militias were heading north to Jufra.
On the other hand, Abu Sleem municipal council said today it holds the Presidency Council (PC) responsible for the violence that gripped parts of Tripoli over the weekend and badly damaged its own district which bore the brunt of the fighting.
The municipality said the PC had failed to install even a semblance of security that could protect Tripoli’s civilians. For this reason, it insisted that the PC had to be held to account. It should also, said the municipality, stick to its promise to provide compensation for the damage, not just over the weekend but in past fighting.
It also urged the Attorney-General to investigate the events of the past few days, particularly within Abu Sleem, where it said there was aggression by “armed groups outside the law to destabilise security and terrorise the people”.
The Fakhr Libya coalition, which supports the former GNC, focused their initial thrust last Friday on pro-PC militiaman Ghneiwa and his Abu Sleem Central Security Force in an unsuccessful attempt to move on the Rixos Hotel and the nearby Camp 77.