Armed groups clash at key Libya-Tunisia border crossing

A force set up by the country's UN-backed unity Government of National Accord to stabilise Libya's west attacked in a bid to seize the Tunisia crossing from militias.
2 min read
06 January, 2018
The crossing has been controlled by militias from Zuwara city since Gaddafi's fall [Getty]

Armed groups clashed on Friday in western Libya, forcing the closure of a key border crossing with Tunisia, an official and a military commander said.

The clashes took place near the Ras Jedir border post, the main crossing between western Libya and southeastern Tunisia.

The crossing has been controlled by militias from the western port city of Zuwara since the fall of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 in a NATO-backed revolt.

On Friday, a force set up by the country's United Nations-backed unity Government of National Accord to stabilise Libya's west attacked in a bid to seize the crossing, said an official from Zuwara who asked to remain anonymous.

The unity government force's commander Osama Jouili, who served as Libya's defence minister after Gaddafi's fall, confirmed the offensive had taken place on Friday.

Speaking to Libya's 218TV, he argued his forces had a mandate from the unity government to secure the region, but did not specify whether the operation was coordinated with authorities in Tripoli or not.

The border post was closed temporarily to "ensure the safety of travellers", he said.

Libya has been wracked by violence since Gaddafi was toppled and killed in 2011.

The unity government has struggled to impose its rule in a country where hundreds of militias hold sway.

Successive transitional authorities have failed to create regular police and army forces capable of restoring order in Libya.

The western border region is highly dependent on cross-border trade, both legal and illegal.

The Zuwara forces who controlled the border post also nominally support the unity government.

They have been accused of involvement in a vast network smuggling contraband and fuel to Tunisia and Malta.

libya