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Libya government reaches new ceasefire deal with Tripoli militias

Agreement calls for joint security force to patrol Tripoli suburbs of Tarhuna

Aftermath of an attack on an election headquarters in Tripoli, Libya on May 2, 2018. Image: @ShabanNaser/Twitter

Libya’s internationally recognized government announced a new ceasefire deal to end a month of fighting between rival militias south of Tripoli that has left more than 100 people dead.

The agreement was signed by representatives of the capital and the town of Tarhuna, southeast of Tripoli, the interior ministry said in a statement on Wednesday, September 26.

The deal ratified by interior minister Abdessalem Ashour calls for the rivals to implement a United Nations-brokered accord, signed on September 4, to form a joint security force of police from Tripoli and Tarhuna to patrol the capital’s southern suburbs.

The Government of National Accord, in a statement, welcomed the halt to fighting that already took effect on Tuesday.

The clashes which erupted on the capital’s southern outskirts on August 26 have left at least 117 dead and more than 400 injured, according to a fresh casualty toll issued by the GNA.

More than 25,000 people have been displaced by the violence.

The Libyan capital has been at the center of a battle for influence between armed groups ever since long-time leader Muammar Qaddafi was ousted and killed in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.

The latest feud has pitted armed groups from Tarhuna and Libya’s third city Misrata against militia forces from Tripoli under the nominal control of the GNA.


With reporting from AFP

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