U.N. envoy reveals extent of latest Libya violence

Members of the Libyan pro-government forces, backed by the locals, travel in an armoured vehicle during clashes in the streets with the Shura Council of Libyan Revolutionaries in Benghazi.

Members of the Libyan pro-government forces, backed by the locals, travel in an armoured vehicle during clashes in the streets with the Shura Council of Libyan Revolutionaries in Benghazi.


The U.N. envoy trying to broker a peace agreement in Libya on Saturday condemned another outbreak of violence and repeated calls for an immediate end to hostilities.

A U.N. Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) statement said Bernardino Leon “strongly condemned the renewed outbreak of violence in different neighborhoods of the Libyan capital that caused many casualties and endangered the lives of civilians”.

It said “initial reports indicate that three civilians were killed, including a young girl”, since fighting broke out Friday in Fashloum, a central district of Tripoli.

“There have also been reports of abductions of civilians and burning of houses,” the statement added.

Leon stressed that, as Libyan political factions are gathered in Morocco in a bid to find a mediated settlement to the crisis in the North African country, there can be “no justification whatsoever” for clashes.

He called on the sides to “exert all efforts to bring an immediate end to the fighting in Tripoli and elsewhere, and to undertake all necessary measures to create a more conducive environment for the on-going dialogue”.

And he urged them to ensure that civilians and their property “are not targeted in the fighting and that international human rights and humanitarian law are respected.

“All civilians abducted should be released immediately, and the wounded given access to medical treatment,” Leon added.

Libya has been divided since the 2011 uprising that toppled and killed dictator Muammar Qaddafi, with the two opposing governments and parliaments and armed groups now battling to control its cities and oil wealth.

On March 24, UNSMIL unveiled a six-point plan to end the crisis, including the formation of a transitional unity government until a new constitution is adopted and elections held.

Talks on that plan are under way in Morocco, where another round might take place on Sunday.


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