Libyan National Army Captures El Feel Oil Field

A view shows El Feel oil field near Murzuq, Libya, July 6, 2017. (Reuters)
A view shows El Feel oil field near Murzuq, Libya, July 6, 2017. (Reuters)
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Libyan National Army Captures El Feel Oil Field

A view shows El Feel oil field near Murzuq, Libya, July 6, 2017. (Reuters)
A view shows El Feel oil field near Murzuq, Libya, July 6, 2017. (Reuters)

The Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Khalifa Haftar announced on Wednesday that it had retaken the Libya's 70,000-barrel-per-day (bpd) El Feel Oil Field from armed groups loyal to the Government of National Accord (GNA).

The National Oil Corporation said earlier on Wednesday that air strikes had halted production at El Feel as LNA retaliated after forces aligned to the GNA in Tripoli took control of the field.

The LNA drove out the rival group and was securing the field, its spokesman, Ahmed Mismari, said on his Facebook page.

The fighting reignited a conflict for control of large oilfields in southwestern Libya between competing military alliances that are also battling on the outskirts of the capital, Tripoli.

"There have been air strikes at the gates of the El Feel oilfield and inside a housing compound at the field used by NOC personnel," NOC Chairman Mustafa Sanalla said in a statement.

"Production will remain shuttered until military activity ceases and all military personnel withdraw from NOC's area of operations."

The LNA said its jets had launched air strikes "at the perimeter of El Feel oilfield targeting the positions of armed groups that attacked the field".

The country's oil production has been repeatedly disrupted in recent years by conflict and blockades but is currently relatively stable at about 1.25 million bpd.

El Feel is operated by Mellitah Oil and Gas, a joint venture between the NOC and Italy's Eni. An engineer at the field said production was 70,000 bpd before the stoppage.

Haftar's forces have controlled El Feel and the nearby El Sharara oilfield, Libya's largest, since February, when they swept through the south before launching an offensive on Tripoli in April.

The campaign for Tripoli quickly stalled, though fighting between rival forces continues on the outskirts of the capital.



Egypt Vows to Block Palestinian Displacement, Hardens Rhetoric on Gaza

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty speaks during a press conference with Cyprus Foreign Minister Constantinos Kombos (not pictured) at the Foreign Ministry in Nicosia, Cyprus September 5, 2025. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou
Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty speaks during a press conference with Cyprus Foreign Minister Constantinos Kombos (not pictured) at the Foreign Ministry in Nicosia, Cyprus September 5, 2025. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou
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Egypt Vows to Block Palestinian Displacement, Hardens Rhetoric on Gaza

Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty speaks during a press conference with Cyprus Foreign Minister Constantinos Kombos (not pictured) at the Foreign Ministry in Nicosia, Cyprus September 5, 2025. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou
Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty speaks during a press conference with Cyprus Foreign Minister Constantinos Kombos (not pictured) at the Foreign Ministry in Nicosia, Cyprus September 5, 2025. REUTERS/Yiannis Kourtoglou

Egypt said on Friday it would not tolerate mass displacement of Palestinians and what it described as genocide, continuing to ratchet up its criticism of Israel's Gaza offensive as thousands of residents of Gaza City defied Israeli orders to leave.

"Displacement is not an option and it is a red line for Egypt and we will not allow it to happen," Egyptian Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty told reporters in Nicosia.

"Displacement means liquidation and the end of the Palestinian cause and there is no legal or moral or ethical ground to evict people from their homeland," he said, Reuters reported.

Repeating accusations of genocide levelled by the Egyptian leadership against Israel in recent months, he added: "What is happening on the ground is far beyond the imagination. There is a genocide in motion there, mass killing of civilians, artificial starvation created by the Israelis," Abdelatty said.

Israel has in the past strongly denied that its actions in Gaza amount to genocide and says they are justified as self defence. It is fighting a case at the International Court of Justice in the Hague that accuses it of genocide and which Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has condemned as "outrageous".

Israel launched its assault on the Gaza Strip in October 2023, after fighters from Hamas, the Palestinian militant group in control of the territory, attacked southern Israel, taking 250 hostages back into Gaza.

More than 64,000 Palestinians have since been killed, Gaza health authorities say, with much of the densely populated enclave laid to ruin and its residents facing a humanitarian crisis.

Israel began an offensive in Gaza City on August 10, in what Netanyahu says is a plan to defeat Hamas militants in the part of Gaza where Israeli troops fought most heavily in the war's initial phase. It now controls about 40 percent of Gaza City, a military spokesperson said on Thursday.

Much of Gaza City was laid to waste in the war's initial weeks in October-November 2023. About a million people lived there before the war, and hundreds of thousands are believed to have returned to live among the ruins, especially since Israel ordered people out of other areas and launched offensives elsewhere.


Houthi Arrests of UN Staff Threaten Aid Operations in Yemen

UN staff live in an atmosphere of fear in Houthi-controlled areas (Local media). 
UN staff live in an atmosphere of fear in Houthi-controlled areas (Local media). 
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Houthi Arrests of UN Staff Threaten Aid Operations in Yemen

UN staff live in an atmosphere of fear in Houthi-controlled areas (Local media). 
UN staff live in an atmosphere of fear in Houthi-controlled areas (Local media). 

A new wave of arrests by Yemen’s Houthi movement has sparked fear among the United Nations and international aid workers operating in rebel-held areas, raising concerns that life-saving assistance could grind to a halt. At least 18 UN employees have been detained in recent weeks, part of a broader campaign that aid officials say has created an atmosphere of terror.

UNICEF warned that the risk of hunger and protection crises is reaching alarming levels, driven by displacement and the collapse of livelihoods. More than 12.5 million people in Houthi-controlled areas are in urgent need of humanitarian aid, according to UN figures.

Several aid workers told Asharq Al-Awsat they now face an impossible choice: flee Houthi areas - losing their jobs and income in a country where the economy has collapsed - or remain under the constant threat of arrest. Many believe the campaign, in which detained staff are accused of espionage, is aimed at sidelining employees unwilling to pledge loyalty to the group. If veteran aid workers are forced out, the sources warned, UN agencies could be left with no choice but to hire staff aligned with Houthi interests.

This strategy mirrors the group’s closure of local NGOs, which enabled it to control beneficiary lists and aid distribution as the sole local partner in large swathes of Yemen.

Houthi leaders have dismissed international condemnation, claiming they are dismantling “spy cells” involved in crimes, including the recent Israeli strike that killed members of their cabinet. In a statement, the group insisted its actions comply with Islamic law, national legislation, and international human rights norms, though it argued UN immunities do not cover espionage.

UN envoy Hans Grundberg warned that detentions, raids on UN offices, and confiscation of assets pose a “serious threat” to the organization’s ability to deliver assistance, stressing that all staff must be protected under international law.

UNICEF confirmed that some of its staff, including the deputy country director in Sana’a, are among the detainees. The agency highlighted that 19.5 million Yemenis will need humanitarian aid this year, with 500,000 children at risk of acute malnutrition and nearly 18 million people lacking access to basic healthcare. Poor sanitation could leave 17.4 million exposed to deadly diseases, while 4.5 million children remain out of school.

The UN’s 2025 response plan seeks $2.47 billion to reach 10.5 million of the most vulnerable, but only 13.6 percent has been funded. UNICEF alone requires $212 million to assist 8 million people, including 5.2 million children.

UN agencies continue to stress that while aid is essential to save lives, sustainable peace, economic recovery, and long-term development are the only way to reduce dependence and build resilience across Yemen.

 

 


Iran Seeks New Channels to Funnel Cash to Hezbollah

Hezbollah supporters wave flag in protest against US envoy’s south Lebanon visit (AP)
Hezbollah supporters wave flag in protest against US envoy’s south Lebanon visit (AP)
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Iran Seeks New Channels to Funnel Cash to Hezbollah

Hezbollah supporters wave flag in protest against US envoy’s south Lebanon visit (AP)
Hezbollah supporters wave flag in protest against US envoy’s south Lebanon visit (AP)

A senior Iraqi official said he rebuffed a request from Iran in late August to grant “extraordinary facilities” at a western border crossing for the transfer of large sums of cash to Lebanon’s Hezbollah via Syria, citing political and security risks.

The official, who spoke to Asharq Al-Awsat on condition of anonymity, said Tehran had assured him its networks inside Syria could handle the onward transfer. “They told us, ‘We have people who can deliver it to Damascus. Iraqis should not worry about that,’” the official said.

Cross-border sources in Syria and Lebanon said Iranian efforts to funnel funds to Hezbollah – under mounting pressure from US and Lebanese demands to disarm – have intensified in recent weeks, with some shipments reportedly making it through with the help of smuggling networks.

Washington is now tracking financial channels that may have moved millions of dollars into Hezbollah’s coffers, according to regional security sources.

Hezbollah, facing strains within its Shi’ite support base, is seeking fresh resources to shore up loyalty and rebuild military strength, Lebanese political figures say.

A US Republican senator, Lindsey Graham, told Lebanese lawmakers last month that Washington had intelligence showing Hezbollah received fresh injections of cash, and he warned the US was probing how the transfers took place.

Iran, bracing for what it calls an inevitable new war with Israel, has instructed allied militias to explore new ways to sustain Hezbollah, Iraqi Shi’ite political leaders told Asharq Al-Awsat.

“It is a mistake to assume Iran will go into the next confrontation without deep, resilient defensive lines in the region, especially in Lebanon,” one said.

The push reflects Tehran’s difficulties in Iraq, where Shi’ite factions face tighter restrictions and are increasingly hesitant to act openly under the “axis of resistance” banner. “The room for maneuver in Baghdad is clearly shrinking,” a senior Shi’ite leader said.

Iraqi security officials said the al-Qaim crossing, near the Syrian town of al-Bukamal, has been under close US surveillance and is considered too risky for covert financial transfers. The area is already known as a “drone playground” for US forces and others, making suspicious movements hard to conceal.

Smuggling routes across the Iraq-Syria frontier – long controlled by Shi’ite groups, remnants of Assad’s forces, ISIS fighters, and other networks – remain active, but Syrian officials insist no cash shipments have crossed through official gateways.

Lebanese analysts say Hezbollah has recently shown a tougher stance on disarmament, reversing earlier signals of compliance, a shift they link to possible fresh funding. While the group has limited its public spending to repairing homes in Beirut’s southern suburbs, many believe it is stockpiling cash for the next war.

The US Treasury has repeatedly announced fresh measures to choke off Iranian financing, and in 2022 estimated Tehran supplied Hezbollah with up to $700 million annually. Hezbollah’s former leader, Hassan Nasrallah, had openly boasted in 2016 that Iran was its primary source of funding.

Despite Israeli strikes targeting financiers and couriers between Iran, Iraq and Lebanon, regional sources say Tehran and Hezbollah continue to preserve alternative routes for money transfers.

Lebanese security officials admit sealing the porous Syrian border remains difficult, with vast stretches open and the under-resourced Lebanese army struggling to block illicit crossings.