Jihadists flock to Libya’s remote south to train

Agence France-Presse

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Jihadists flock to Libya’s remote south to train

EPA

An intelligence official says jihadists have set up three 'secret camps' in southern Libya where hundreds of militants are training to fight in Mali, Iraq or Syria

TRIPOLI, Libya – Libya’s remote desert south has become a haven for north African jihadists who have set up training camps in what has traditionally been a hotbed of arms smuggling, experts say.

Oil-rich Libya slid into chaos after veteran dictator Moamer Kadhafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed uprising three years ago.

Weapons looted from his arsenal have made their way to the so-called “Salvador Triangle,” a no-man’s land formed by the porous borders of Libya, Algeria and Niger, experts say.

For years the triangle was the backyard of smugglers and traffickers through which illicit weapons flowed easily between north Africa and countries in sub-Saharan Africa.

But since the uprising, the activity of jihadists with links to Al-Qaeda has flourished in the region, buoyed by the inability of the Libyan authorities to tame the armed groups.

On October 10, France said its forces had destroyed a convoy belonging to Al-Qaeda’s north African branch in Niger that was carrying arms from Libya to Mali.

The operation was part of a counter-terrorism campaign led by France to flush out jihadists, including Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQMI), from the Sahel region.

Jihadists had occupied the desert north of Mali for 10 months before they were ousted in January 2013 in a French-led military intervention.

“The south of Libya has become a hideout for extremists following the French military intervention in Mali,” said Mohamed Fazzani, an expert on jihadist groups.

“It is very difficult for any army to control such a vast region, unless it has sophisticated technology” because the jihadists “know very well the terrain and can set up camps despite harsh conditions.”

An intelligence official, who declined to be named, told Agence France-Presse that jihadists have set up three “secret camps” in southern Libya where hundreds of militants are training to fight in Mali, Iraq or Syria.

“These camps have become the key providers of combat-ready jihadists,” the source said.

Drones spot jihadists

Libya expert Jason Pack says jihadists pushed out from northern Mali have set up training camps in Libya’s south, adding that the region has become “much more” than a transit route for gunmen and smugglers.

“Drones have spotted training camps and Western intelligence officers have been to these places,” he said.

“I don’t have precise figures. But I’m sure that there are Libyans among these jihadist groups,” added Pack, a researcher on Libya at the University of Cambridge and president of Libya-analysis.com.

Both Pack and Fazzani also drew links between jihadists entrenched in Libya’s remote south and powerful Islamist militia in the north and east of the country.

These groups are challenging the authority of the government and the internationally recognized parliament elected in June, and have swept across the capital Tripoli and second city Benghazi in the east.

According to Fazzani the jihadists in the south received logistical support from Islamists in northern Libya.

In January 2013, jihadists coming in from Libya stormed the In Amenas desert gas plant in the far southeast of Algeria.

Around 40 hostages, all but one of them foreign, were killed in a bloody 4-day siege and army operation that followed.

‘Worn-out troops’

Army spokesman Colonel Ahmed al-Mesmari agrees that training camps have sprouted up in the remote south but told Agence France-Presse that Libyan troops are ill-equipped and under-staffed to confront the jihadists.

“The army suffers from a lack of means and cannot carry out regular patrols in these immense regions,” Mesmari said.

“Furthermore, the armed forces are worn out by the fighting under way in the east and west of the country,” he said.

Since the revolution, the interim authorities have struggled to establish a regular army and police force and had to rely on state-backed militias to secure vital installations, including oil, airports and borders.

Libya’s Islamists include the Ansar al-Sharia jihadist militia, which the United States has branded a “terrorist” organisation, and Far Libya, a coalition of militias.

Fajr Libya seized Tripoli at the end of August after fierce fighting with the pro-government Zintan forces for control of the capital’s airport, and then extended its operations to the western Warshefana region.

Ansar al-Sharia has its stronghold in eastern Libya, where it has been locked in deadly fighting with the men of retired general Khalifa Haftar since May. – Rappler.com

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