Libya’s Haftar orders troops to fight harder during Ramadan

Eastern Libyan forces commander Khalifa Haftar urged his troops trying to take Tripoli to battle harder and teach their enemies an even bigger lesson, because the Muslim month of Ramadan that begins on Monday was a month of holy war.

His comments came just hours after the United Nations called for a week-long humanitarian truce following a month of fighting for the capital that has displaced 50 000 people, killed around 400 and badly damaged some southern districts.

Haftar had already defied the UN when he launched his Tripoli offensive in April on the same day UN Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres, was visiting the capital to prepare a national reconciliation conference.

Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA), which is allied to a parallel government in the east, has not been able to breach the southern defences of Tripoli, which is held by the internationally recognised government.

On an audiotape released by his force’s spokesperson, Haftar said Ramadan had not been a reason to halt previous battles when he seized the eastern cities of Benghazi and Derna as he expanded his power and the country collapsed into chaos after the toppling of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

“Officers and soldiers in our armed forces and the auxiliary forces, I salute you in these glorious days and urge you, with your strength and determination, to teach the enemy a greater and bigger lesson than the previous ones, as we’ve always known you to do, till we uproot it from our beloved land,” Haftar said.

He did not mention the UN call for a truce.

In a statement earlier on Sunday, the UN Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) appealed for a truce starting on Monday morning at 04:00 local time to coincide with the beginning of Ramadan.

As the UN issued its statement, artillery shelling could be heard coming from southern outskirts of the capital, where the LNA has been trying to breach defences by Tripoli forces.

The renewed conflict threatens to disrupt oil supplies, drive increased migration across the Mediterranean to Europe, and scupper UN plans for an election to end rivalries between parallel administrations in Libya’s east and west.

HOLY MONTH

The speech by Haftar, a former Gaddafi general, included religious references to historic campaigns by Muslim forces.

“Our battles against terrorism in Benghazi and Derna did not stop in the holy month of Ramadan but we increased our determination and strength in this holy month,” he said.

Emad Badi, a Libya researcher, said Haftar might be trying to reach out to ultra-conservative Salafis. They are among his forces, but also have a presence in Tripoli.

Haftar’s LNA seized the sparsely populated but oil-rich south of the country earlier in 2019 before turning on Tripoli in April.

In his speech on Sunday, Haftar again framed his battle as counter-terrorism. His main backers are the United Arab Emirates and Egypt, which see him as bulwark against Islamist militants and chaos.

He has also won support from France, whose main objective in Libya is to fight terrorism, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian told Le Figaro newspaper last week, while denying Paris backed Haftar’s offensive on Tripoli.


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