Libya: airstrikes target traffickers' infrastructure

 


On Thursday, the government of national unity in Libya, which is located in the nation's capital of Tripoli, stated that it had launched airstrikes against smugglers' bases in the country's western region.

The Ministry of Defence released a statement on Thursday saying, "Our national air force carried out precise and targeted air strikes against the hideouts of gangs of traffickers in fuel, drugs, and human beings in the western coastal region."

The letter posted on the Facebook page of the ministry's press office claimed that the attacks carried out "on orders of the head of government," Abdelhamid Dbeibah, "successfully hit their targets," but provided no other information regarding the areas attacked.

According to local media, the impacted areas are on the fringes of Zawiya, a seaside town 45 km west of the city where armed gangs involved in human trafficking and other illegal enterprises including gasoline smuggling have been fighting for many weeks.

Although there are currently no official numbers available, Libyan news websites have reported material damage in the area of the port of al-Maya, a small seaside town about thirty kilometres west of the capital, and in the Abu-Sourra sector, south of Zawiya, indicating that the strikes were conducted by drones.

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