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Libya pro-gov’t forces seize Daesh headquarters in Sirte

By AFP - Aug 10,2016 - Last updated at Aug 10,2016

TRIPOLI — Pro-government forces in Libya said they seized control of the Daesh terror group's headquarters in Sirte on Wednesday as they push to oust the extremists from the coastal city.

"The Ouagadougou centre is in our hands," the operations centre for forces loyal to Libya's Government of National Accord (GNA) said.

Reda Issa, a spokesman for the forces, said Daesh militants remained in three residential areas of the city and in a villa complex near the seafront.

"The announcement of the liberation [of Sirte] will only be made once the entire city is liberated," he told AFP.

Capturing the Ouagadougou centre has been the key goal of pro-GNA forces as they have battled for weeks to oust Daesh from Sirte, which the terrorists seized in June last year amid the chaos that followed the 2011 ouster of Muammar Qadhafi.

The city's fall to Daesh raised deep concerns in the West, with fears the terrorists were gaining an important foothold just across the Mediterranean from Europe.

Loyalist forces stepped up their fight for the city in recent days, and the Pentagon announced last week it had begun carrying out air strikes on Daesh positions in Sirte at the GNA's request.

The capture of the headquarters followed a rapid advance on Wednesday that saw pro-GNA forces seize the University of Sirte campus just south of the conference centre and the Ibn Sina Hospital to the north.

It was not immediately clear how many fighters on either side may have been killed in the clashes, but the operations centre said earlier that at least 20 terrorists had died in fighting for the university campus.

Pro-GNA forces entered Sirte in June, but their advance slowed as the extremists hit back with sniper fire, suicide attacks and car bombings.

On Sunday pro-government forces said the "countdown" had begun for the final assault on Daesh's holdout positions in the city, which is 450 kilometres east of Tripoli.

In a statement on Wednesday, the US Africa Command said 29 strikes had been carried out against Daesh positions as part of "Operation Odyssey Lightning" as of Tuesday.

The Washington Post reported on Tuesday that US commandos were working from a joint operations centre on the outskirts of Sirte, the first time they have directly supported Libyan forces in the anti-Daesh fight.

 

Western powers are backing the GNA in a bid to bring stability to Libya, which has been wracked by turmoil since longtime dictator Qadhafi was ousted and killed in October 2011, with rival governments vying for power and armed groups battling to control vast energy resources.

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