Libya: Military Selections Build up GNA-LNA Tensions

Libyan army troopers which witnessed  new military appointments by GNA prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj  (AFP)
Libyan army troopers which witnessed new military appointments by GNA prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj (AFP)
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Libya: Military Selections Build up GNA-LNA Tensions

Libyan army troopers which witnessed  new military appointments by GNA prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj  (AFP)
Libyan army troopers which witnessed new military appointments by GNA prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj (AFP)

Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA) Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj assigned a number of officials to new military posts, building up tensions with eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) commander Marshal Khalifa Hafter.

Sarraj renewed Colonel Faraj Al-Barasi’s contract, having him serve for another year, and later issued an additional decision to promote him to the rank of Brigadier General.

Tripoli-based Sarraj appointed Major General Abdullah Aoun, a former military commander who served under the Gaddafi regime in 2011, as a military advisor to the GNA’s presidential council.

Sarraj’s government is supported by the United Nations and recognized on an international scale.

The Egyptian capital hosted a set of meetings between Libyan officers who agree on unifying the country's military establishment under a single system led by Hafter.

Sarraj's attempt to appear as supreme commander in control of armed forces would delay an agreement being developed in Cairo, source close to Hafter told Asharq Al-Awsat.

The fifth meeting of its kind since last year was held recently in the Egyptian capital.

On the other hand, Libya’s Muslim Brotherhood political branch, the Justice and Construction Party, threatened to sue a group of cultural and media elites and activists who called for an end to the party's activity.
In a statement, the party reserved the right to file a lawsuit against inciters, saying that it as a party is “paying a heavy price because of its commitment to promoting a democratic transition process.”

On that note, Head of the UN mission to Libya Ghassan Salame held talks in Benghazi with the authorities running eastern Libya following talks in Tripoli with the GNA and the Supreme State Council heads (Sarraj and Abdulrahman Sewehli).

It was reported that Salame discussed with Benghazi Mayor Abdul Rahman al-Abbar efforts to stabilize the situation in Libya.

The UN Mission announced that it documented 146 civilian casualties; 13 deaths and 133 injuries sustained during the course of hostilities throughout Libya during in February alone.



EU Report Finds Little Aid Is Getting into Gaza

Humanitarian aid is airdropped by the Royal French Army over the northern part of the Gaza Strip, 08 August 2025. (EPA)
Humanitarian aid is airdropped by the Royal French Army over the northern part of the Gaza Strip, 08 August 2025. (EPA)
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EU Report Finds Little Aid Is Getting into Gaza

Humanitarian aid is airdropped by the Royal French Army over the northern part of the Gaza Strip, 08 August 2025. (EPA)
Humanitarian aid is airdropped by the Royal French Army over the northern part of the Gaza Strip, 08 August 2025. (EPA)

The European Union has concluded that little aid is flowing into Gaza despite an understanding reached between Brussels and Israel last month, according to a report by the 27-nation bloc’s foreign service.

Although roughly 5,000 trucks entered Gaza during the “limited lifting of the blockade by Israel,” there are still “significant operational and bureaucratic constraints” on aid delivery, according to a copy of the report obtained by The Associated Press on Friday.

Since May 19, an average of 36 trucks a day has entered Gaza, laden with food, nutrition supplements, medical supplies and chlorine, but 90% was looted once in Gaza, the report says.

The EU had reached an agreement with Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar to increase humanitarian aid into Gaza, but officials have not been able to confirm any improvements for themselves.

Israel has blocked an EU monitoring team from entering Gaza because they were not humanitarian aid providers, said Anna-Kaisa Itkonen, a European Commission spokesperson, at a press conference in Brussels on Thursday.