Turkey Continues to Send Weapons, Mercenaries to Libya, EU Report Says

The Turkish Minister of Defense during his recent visit to Tripoli to support the Government of National Accord (AP)
The Turkish Minister of Defense during his recent visit to Tripoli to support the Government of National Accord (AP)
TT

Turkey Continues to Send Weapons, Mercenaries to Libya, EU Report Says

The Turkish Minister of Defense during his recent visit to Tripoli to support the Government of National Accord (AP)
The Turkish Minister of Defense during his recent visit to Tripoli to support the Government of National Accord (AP)

Recent European report revealed that Turkey is still sending weapons to Libya’s al-Watiya airbase in western Tripoli.

Two cargo planes coming from Turkey landed in the airbase, Italian news agency Nova reported on Thursday.

According to the report, one of these aircraft carries advanced air defense systems, exclusively owned by NATO member states, while the second plane held a number of logistical materials and forces from Syrian armed factions loyal to Turkey as mercenaries to fight for the Government of National Accord (GNA).

The Tripoli-based GNA and Turkey signed a number of security agreements last year, which paved the way for Ankara to send its own troops as well as Syrian mercenaries to fight with GNA against the Libyan National Army (LNA).

Meanwhile, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) affirmed that Turkey is still keeping about 8,000 Syrian mercenaries in Libya despite the UN-brokered ceasefire agreement signed by the two warring parties in October 2020.

SOHR Chief Rami Abdul Rahman said the Turkish mercenaries didn’t receive their full salaries promised by Ankara, which is estimated at $2000 to $3000.

He pointed out that their leaders deduct large sums from their salaries before transferring them to their families in their home country.

The number of recruits who arrived in Libya amounts to 18,000 Syrian mercenaries, including 350 children under the age of 18, of whom 10,750 returned to Syria after receiving their financial dues.



Israeli Strike in Syria's Quneitra Kills Two

The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
TT

Israeli Strike in Syria's Quneitra Kills Two

The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP
The Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle on the Damascus-Quneitra road. AFP

A Syria war monitor said an Israeli airstrike on Thursday in Quneitra province in the Syria-controlled Golan Heights killed two people, days after major raids elsewhere in the country.

"An Israeli airstrike targeted a vehicle" on the Damascus-Quneitra road, "killing two people," said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, without identifying them.

A local security source told AFP that "two charred bodies were removed" from the vehicle that was hit.

The Israeli army did not immediately comment on the reported strike.

Thursday's strike came days after raids blamed on Israel killed 18 people in the central province of Hama, according to Syrian authorities.

The Observatory said those strikes killed 27 people, including six civilians, and targeted a "scientific research area" and other sites in the province's Masyaf area.