Skip to main content

Libya: Warlord Orders Navy to Confront Ships Invited by Libyan Government

Libyan Field Marshal Khalifa Hifter ordered his naval forces to confront foreign ships entering Libyan waters without military permission. The ships most likely to be confronted are Italian boats sent at the request of Libya’s internationally-recognized civilian government to help manage the migrant crisis.

Hifter, whose name is often spelled “Haftar,” runs the largest of the armed forces claiming dominion over parts of Libya after the overthrow of Moammar Qaddafi. He gained political influence and popularity thanks to military success against the Islamic State, which at one time threatened to gobble up a fair chunk of Libya.
He is not on board with the Government of National Accord supported by the international community, which in turn has not been enthusiastic about naming Hifter supreme commander of the Libyan government’s armed forces, as he demands. He insists on referring to his troops as Libya’s national army, to the great annoyance of the GNA.
Hifter and Prime Minister Fayez Serraj agreed to cooperate after a meeting in Paris last week, but no sooner had the Italian parliament approved the Serraj administration’s request for naval assistance to reduce the flow of migrants across the Mediterranean than Hifter issued his public decree to intercept all such vessels. A grand total of one Italian patrol boat made it to Tripoli before the order was issued.
Italy announced its joint operation with the Libyan government last week, saying it planned to send a total of six ships, but the scope of the mission was reduced when the Libyan government apparently decided six Italian ships were too many.
Italian Defense Minister Roberta Pinotti said Italy was willing to “provide logistical, technical and operational support for Libyan naval vessels, helping them and supporting them in shared and coordinated actions,” and offered reassurances that Libyan sovereignty would not be compromised or insulted by Italy’s help.
Someone in Tripoli responded by hanging up a poster of a hero from Libyan resistance to Italian rule in the 1920s with the slogan, “No to a return to colonization.”
One of Libya’s other governments, the eastern parliament aligned with Hifter politically, worried that Italy was planning to dump “tens of thousands of illegal immigrants” back in Libya. This parliament denounced the Italian plan as a “violation of the sovereignty of Libya,” and even had the cheek to accuse Italy of trying to “export the illegal migration crisis” by returning migrants who had previously set sail from the Libyan coast.
The migrants in question are mostly Africans from outside Libya and Italy has been overwhelmed with about 600,000 of them over the past four years, creating a crisis that is said to top the voters’ list of priorities in next year’s elections. Even as various governments and warlords in Libya were complaining about the oppressive presence of six Italian ships off their cost, opposition leaders in Italy were accusing their own government of taking only meaningless symbolic gestures to hold back the migrant tide.

Offering a final indignity, Prime Minister Serraj denied “having asked Italy to send naval vessels into Libya’s territorial waters,” said allegations to the contrary “are without any foundation,” and declared “Libya’s national sovereignty is a red line that nobody must cross.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Carthy calls on Coveney to intervene in case of Hunger-striking refugees in Greece

Sinn Féin MEP Matt Carthy has called on the Minister for Foreign Affairs Simon Coveney to urgently intervene in the case of asylum seekers in Greece who have been on hunger strike for over a month. Bahrooz Arash, and Kozhin Hussein are demanding an end to arbitrary imprisonment and inhumane treatment including psychological and physical abuse of refugees in Moria detention centre. Matt Carthy said: “I have contacted the Irish Minister for Foreign Affairs, The Irish Embassy in Greece and Christos Stylianides EU Commissioner for Humanitarian Aid & Crisis regarding the disturbing case of asylum seekers in Greece who have been on hunger strike for over a month now. “The Hunger strikers are seeking an end to arbitrary imprisonment and inhumane treatment including psychological and physical abuse of refugees in Moria detention centre. “Bahrooz Arash is now in a particularly bad condition having lost 16kgs since his hunger strike began. “Despite medical opinio...

Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh: Dera Sacha Sauda spiritual leader found guilty of raping female followers

Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh at a news conference to launch the score for his film 'MSG-2 The Messenger' in Mumbai  AFP/Getty Images A popular Indian actor and spiritual leader, Gurmeet Ram Rahim Singh, has been convicted of raping his followers following a high profile trial. Singh was found guilty of raping two women  in a case dating back to 2002  at the headquarters of his Dera Sacha Sauda group in the town of Sirsa. The bearded guru, who had denied the charges, had arrived for the hearing with a 100-vehicle convoy that left his ashram early on Friday.  Some 15,000 police and soldiers were deployed in Panchkula, the town where his trial took place, for fear of violence. Tens of thousands of his devotees had travelled there to protest his innocence, according to reports, while internet and phone services were throttled in a bid to forestall unrest. In a televised appeal, Singh asked his supporters not to resort to violence, but some said they would not t...

Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar of the Libyan National Army (LNA) threatens to attack Italian vessels in Libyan waters unlikely to materialise, but risks support mission

   the Italian parliament approved legislation allowing Italian military vessels to patrol Libyan waters in order to stem the flow of migrants entering Italy. This is the latest in a series of initiatives and proposals by the Italian government to block the Mediterranean migrant route, including the recent introduction of a code of conduct curtailing the flexibility of aid groups and non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to operate rescue vessels in the Mediterranean. In response to the latest measure to deploy the Italian navy, Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar of the Libyan National Army (LNA) – a militia associated with the Tobruk-based government in eastern Libya – warned that any non-commercial vessel entering Libyan waters without prior authorisation would be attacked.