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Rival East Libya Factions Battle For Crucial Oil Ports
Ras Lanuf is one of four key oil terminals in the 'oil crescent'
March 6th, 2017 | 08:49 AM | 1625 views
LIBYA
Rival armed factions are fighting for control over crucial oil terminals in the east of Libya.
The forces of military strongman Khalifa Haftar, who have controlled the "oil crescent" since September, lost ground, their spokesman says.
He said they had carried out air strikes against a faction known as the Benghazi Defence Brigade (BDB), after it launched an attack on Friday.
Four oil terminals in the area provide much of Libya's export income.
Libya remains regionally split with two centres of power that politically oppose each other, and a myriad of rival armed groups that the country's two governments cannot control.
Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar is allied to an administration based in the eastern city of Tobruk, which is challenging the authority of the UN-backed unity government based in Tripoli.
His forces, known as the Libyan National Army (LNA), have been battling Islamist and other militias in the area since forcing them out of much of the country's second city, Benghazi, in February 2016.
Oil exports resumed after the LNA took over the four terminals of Zuitina, Brega, Ras Lanuf and Sidra six months ago, giving a strong boost to the country's output after a blockade of nearly two years.
A dangerous shift - Rana Jawad, BBC North Africa Correspondent
Libya's oil facilities, airports and other vital infrastructure have, in part, been at the centre of a battle of wills between rival armed factions for years now.
Observers have been warning of the dangers of a looming war in the oil crescent for months, and the need for local and international players to prioritise defusing tensions there.
This latest move by the so-called Benghazi Defence Brigade is ultimately motivated by a need for territorial gains to remain a relevant stakeholder in whatever shape Libya's future takes. This is what all of Libya's armed groups are fighting for.
It will be difficult for the BDB to maintain its ground there, or to push further east.
However, this latest shift is a dangerous one that raises the prospects of a wider war that the country cannot afford politically, or financially.
The stakes are high in this particular battle because it affects everyone - oil is Libya's lifeline.
Source:
courtesy of BBC NEWS
by BBC News
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