BENGHAZI, Libya: Islamic State militants attacked forces
guarding one of Libya's main oil ports on Thursday with a gun assault
and an attempted car bomb in an escalation of their campaign in the
North African state, a local security official said.
Islamic
State has gained ground in Libya where two rival governments - one
internationally recognised and the other self-declared - are battling
for control, leaving a security vacuum four years after the uprising
toppled Muammar Gaddafi.
Militants attacked guards at a gate near
Es Sider port, which is under the control of forces allied with the
recognised government, the security official said. The terminal has been
closed since December because of fighting with other rival armed
factions and problems at supply oilfields.
"An attack was carried
out by militants of Islamic State on a gate before sunset in the Es
Sider area," Ali Hassi, spokesman for the a local battalion of the
Petroleum Facilities Guard, a force allied with the official government.
He
said one guard was killed and two more wounded, but he gave no details
about how close the gate was to the port itself. Militants later tried
to target the same gate with a car bomb but failed and four of them were
shot dead, he said.
Libya's oil infrastructure has been battered
by the emerging conflict in the OPEC state, where rival armed factions,
Islamist militants and tribal groups often battle each other and
protesters close oilfields to demand jobs and payments.
Tripoli is
under the control of Libya Dawn forces, which set up their own
self-declared government and parliament. The internationally recognised
government operates out of the east. Both are backed by loose alliances
of armed factions.
In the chaos, Islamic State has set up a base
in the city of Sirte, and has attacked oilfields before. In March, they
attacked al-Ghani oilfield, and nine oil workers including foreigners
were kidnapped there.
But a move to try to attack a key field or port like Es Sider would be a major escalation of their campaign.
Es
Sider and the Ras Lanuf oil terminals, which have been closed since
December, are the country's main oil ports and have a combined capacity
of around 600,000 barrels per day.
Western governments, concerned
about the growing Islamic State influence and the flow of illegal
migrants from Libya's coast, are pushing for the two rival governments
to accept a United Nations-backed peace deal.
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/world/islamic-state-militants-a/2164816.html
No comments:
Post a Comment