Mounting Voices within GNA Reject Implementation of Libya Ceasefire

Buildings destroyed during past fighting with ISIS militants are seen in Sirte, Libya Aug.18, 2020. (Reuters)
Buildings destroyed during past fighting with ISIS militants are seen in Sirte, Libya Aug.18, 2020. (Reuters)
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Mounting Voices within GNA Reject Implementation of Libya Ceasefire

Buildings destroyed during past fighting with ISIS militants are seen in Sirte, Libya Aug.18, 2020. (Reuters)
Buildings destroyed during past fighting with ISIS militants are seen in Sirte, Libya Aug.18, 2020. (Reuters)

Voices of rejection have been mounting among the militias allied with the Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA) over the implementation of the 5+5 military committee’s ceasefire agreement.

The UN-sponsored agreement was reached between the Libyan National Army (LNA) and GNA in October.

Salah Badi, commander of the al-Somoud militias in Misrata, announced his rejection to open the coastal road between western city and the central city of Sirte in line with the agreement.

A spokesman for Badi, who is wanted locally and internationally on war crimes charges, said the militia will not open the road before the LNA pulls out from Sirte and al-Jufra.

In the southern city of Sabha, clashes erupted between the LNA and GNA.

No official statement was issued by either side, but local sources and the media said the fighting broke out suddenly when an LNA unit attempted to seize a headquarters for GNA forces.

Residents of the city, which lies some 800 kilometers southwest of the capital Tripoli, said they heard explosions and confirmed the deployment of forces from both sides in its suburbs.

In the capital Tripoli, Syrian mercenaries, who were flown in by Turkey to fight for the GNA, were seen departing the country.

The fighters were seen at Mitiga airport where they boarded a plane that flew them to the Turkish city of Istanbul.

Local media quoted a source as saying that this was not first such departing flight, revealing that another batch of some 150 to 180 mercenaries had left on Saturday also via the airport.

The LNA confirmed the flights. The GNA has yet to comment on them.

The LNA said it was too soon to determine whether the mercenaries will be flown back to Libya.

Last week, the fighters had openly protested over unpaid wages, in an embarrassment to the GNA.



Hamas Claims Attack on Israeli Bus in West Bank That Wounded 8 People, Including 4 Soldiers

Four people suffered bullet wounds, three of them serious, and four others were lightly injured by shards of glass, according to the Magen David Adom rescue service - AFP
Four people suffered bullet wounds, three of them serious, and four others were lightly injured by shards of glass, according to the Magen David Adom rescue service - AFP
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Hamas Claims Attack on Israeli Bus in West Bank That Wounded 8 People, Including 4 Soldiers

Four people suffered bullet wounds, three of them serious, and four others were lightly injured by shards of glass, according to the Magen David Adom rescue service - AFP
Four people suffered bullet wounds, three of them serious, and four others were lightly injured by shards of glass, according to the Magen David Adom rescue service - AFP

Hamas claimed responsibility for a shooting attack on an Israeli bus in the occupied West Bank on Friday that wounded eight people, including four soldiers.

It was the latest violence to scar the territory as tensions run high 14 months into the Israel-Hamas war.

The attacker, who Hamas identified in a statement as Samer Hussein, 46, was killed by Israeli troops shortly after opening fire toward the bus at a junction near the Israeli settlement of Ariel.

The military said four soldiers were lightly wounded. Paramedics said three people were critically wounded.

Attacks by Palestinian fighters on Israelis in the volatile territory have grown more common since the start of the Israel-Hamas war, as Palestinian deaths have also spiked.  

Israeli fire has killed 796 Palestinians since Oct. 7, 2023, mostly in military raids on Palestinian cities and towns. Attacks by settlers on Palestinians and their property have also increased.