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Libyan Civil War (2014–present)

From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In February 2011 started an upheavel and armed conflict against Muammar Qadaffi. Qadaffi, Libya's absolute ruler during 42 years, was killed in October 2011. This armed revolt is referred to as the first civil war in Libya. [1] Political and military factions engaged since 2011 in an ungoing struggle to get control over the Libyan territory[2] in alliances with external actors.[3] Since February 2011, the Libyan civil war went through different phases, including periods of intensified armed confrontations[4].The violent confrontations led to serious human rights abuses as well as war crimes.[5] A second phase of intense fighting between rival factions seeking control of Libya, often referred to as the second Libyan civil war, started in 2014.[6] Between April 2019 and June 2020 very intense fighting took place when General Khalifa Haftar and his Libyan National Army (LNA) tried in vain to capture the capital Tripoli and to oust the United Nations-recognized government. Both sides were backed by foreign actors.[7] Experts from the United Nations noted in 2020 that the Tripoli based government supported by Turkey as well the LNA assisted by Russian private military personel of the so-called Wagner Group involved other third country nationals in their military operations.[8]

The conflict is mostly between two rival power centres; one is based in Tripoli; the other in the east of Tobruk. In October 2020, the two administrations accepted a ceasefire and Libyan politicians agreed on having a unified interim government as well as parliamentary and presidential elections in December 2021.[9] The rival camps consist of:

  • on the one hand, the HoR, the House of Representatives, elected in 2014 with a low turnout, which relocated to Tobruk in the east and is aligned to Khalifa Haftar. The HoR chose in February 2022 Fathi Bashaga, a former minister of Interior, as interim prime minister of Libya;[10]
  • on the other hand in Tripoli the interim-government led by Abdul Hamid Mohammed Dbeibah supported by the military from the western part of the country. Dbeibah was elected in February 2021 by the Libyan Poltical Dialogue Forum (LPDF). This forum consists of 75 persons representing Libya's main geographical regions as well as social and political groups.[11]

Legal and political obstacles led to a political impasse and presidential elections postponed for an indefinite period. While no major armed clashes took place since the October 2020 ceasefire, security incidents continued to be reported by the United Nations especially in the western and southern parts of Libya.[12] The United Nations Special Advisor on Libya initiated a dialogue between the rival political camps. In April 2022, a first meeting took place in Cairo (Egypt). However, an agreement has yet to be achieved. [13]

Second Libyan Civil War
Part of the Arab Winter and the Libyan Crisis

Military situation in Libya on 11 June 2020
  Under the control of the House of Representatives and the Libyan National Army
  Under the control of the Government of National Accord (GNA) and different militias forming the Libya Shield Force
  Controlled by local forces
(For a more detailed map, see military situation in the Libyan Civil War)
Date16 May 2014 – 23 October 2020
(6 years, 5 months and 1 week)
Location
Result

Ceasefire

Main belligerents

Libya House of Representatives (Tobruk-based)[14][15]

Wagner Group
(since 2018)
[25][26][27][28][29]
Egypt Egypt[30][31][32]
United Arab Emirates United Arab Emirates[30][33][34][35]
 Sudan (RSF)[36] (since 2019)
 Syria
(since 2020)[37][38][39]

Libya Government of National Accord (Tripoli-based) (since 2016)

Syrian opposition Syrian National Army (since 2019)[67]
 Turkey (since 2020)[68][69][70]

Libya National Salvation Government
(2014–2017)[85][86]

Support:

Shura Council of
Benghazi Revolutionaries

(2014–2017)[95][96]
al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb
(2014–2017)[97]

IS
(from 2014)[102]

Support:
Commanders and leaders
Libya Aguila Saleh Issa
(President of House of Representatives)
Libya Abdullah al-Thani
(Prime Minister)[110]
FM Khalifa Haftar
(High Commander of the LNA)
Gen. Abdulrazek al-Nadoori (Chief of the General Staff of the LNA)
Col. Wanis Abu Khamada
(Commander of Libyan Special Forces)
Brig. Gen. Almabrook Suhban
(Chief of Staff of the Libyan Ground Forces)
Brig. Gen. Saqr Geroushi
(Chief of Staff of the Libyan Air Force) (LNA-aligned)
Adm. Faraj al-Mahdawi
(Chief of Staff of the Libyan Navy) (LNA-aligned)
Libya Saif al-Islam Gaddafi
(Candidate for President of Libya)
Libya Fayez al-Sarraj
(Chairman of the Presidential Council and Prime minister)
Libya Fathi Bashagha
(Minister of Interior)
Libya Salah Eddine al-Namrush
(Minister of Defence)
Gen. Mohammad Ali al-Haddad
(Chief of the General Staff of the Libyan Army)
Abdul Hakim Abu Hawliyeh (Chief of the Libyan Navy) (GNA-aligned)
Col. Rida Issa (Commander of Libyan Navy) (GNA-aligned)
Maj. Gen. Osama Juwaili
(Commander of the Western Military Zone)
Maj. Gen. Abubaker Marwan
(Commander of Tripoli Military Zone)
Maj. Gen. Mohamed Elhadad
(Commander of the Central Military Zone)
Gen. Ali Kanna
(Commander of the Southern Military Zone)

Libya Nouri Abusahmain (2014–16)
(President of the GNC)
Libya Khalifa al-Ghawil (2015–2017)
(Prime Minister)[111]
Libya Sadiq Al-Ghariani
(Grand Mufti)


Abu Khalid al Madani 
(Ansar al-Sharia Leader)[112]
Mokhtar Belmokhtar
(Commander of Al-Mourabitoun, believed dead)[113]
Musa Abu Dawud  (AQIM southern Zone commander)[97]

Mohamed al-Zahawi [114]
(Former Ansar al-Sharia Leader)
Ateyah Al-Shaari DMSC / DPF leader
Wissam Ben Hamid [115]
(Libya Shield 1 Commander)
Salim Derby 
(Commander of Abu Salim Martyrs Brigade)[116]
Abu Nabil al-Anbari  (Top ISIL leader in Libya)[117][118]
Abu Hudhayfah al-Muhajir[119]
(ISIL governor of Wilayat Tripolitania)
Casualties and losses
14,882+ killed (2014–2018, 2019–2020, incomplete)[120][121][122][123][124]

References

[change | change source]
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  2. Gartenstein-Ross, Daveed & Barr, Nathaniel. Dignity and dawn: Libya's escalating civil war. ICCT, February 2019, p9.
  3. Loschi, Chiara & Pagano, Chiara. Lyy(s) en devenir, Dossier de recherche, 28-2022-11. CNRS, Open edition journals, p3; al-Shadeedi, Hamszeh& van Veen, Erwin & Harchaoui, Jalel. One thousand and one failings, security sector stabilisation and development in Libya. CRU report, April 2020, p7.
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