Libyan forces 'retake port' in ISIS bastion Sirte

A tank belonging to forces aligned with Libya's new unity government is seen on a road as they advance on Sirte, Libya June 10, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

TRIPOLI (AFP) - Forces allied with Libya's unity government said Saturday they had recaptured the port in the militant bastion of Sirte, advancing rapidly against Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group fighters encircled inside the city.

The fall of Sirte, the hometown of ousted dictator Moamer Kadhafi, would be a major setback for the extremists who have also lost territory in Syria and Iraq where they have declared an Islamic "caliphate".

Apart from the port, the Libyan forces also retook residential areas in the east of Sirte, which for the past year has been the main ISIS base in the North African country, a spokesman for the forces, Rida Issa, told AFP.

The militants are now surrounded in a densely populated area of around 5 sq km inside Sirte where they are laying booby traps, he said.

Most of the city's residents have fled but some 30,000 remain, Issa said.

After a month-long operation to close in on Sirte, the rapid pace of the advance by forces allied to the Government of National Accord (GNA) who entered the city on Wednesday has surprised Libyan authorities.

"The battle wasn't as difficult as we thought it would be," one government official said.

"Maybe we exaggerated their (IS') numbers?"

The UN envoy to Libya, Martin Kobler, said Saturday on Twitter that he was "impressed" by the "rapid progress" of pro-GNA forces.

France also hailed the advance and called for all political factions to unite against ISIS.

But analysts have warned the city's fall would not spell the end of the militants in Libya, where they have fed on political and military divisions since the 2011 uprising that killed Kadhafi.

Foreign intelligence services estimate the extremist group has 5,000 fighters in the country, but its strength inside Sirte, which ISIS has held since June 2015, is unclear.

ISIS fighters tried to wrest back the port on Saturday in an attack that killed two members of the GNA forces, who repelled the assault.

A total of 137 pro-GNA forces have been killed and 500 wounded since the operation began on May 12, according to a medical official in the western city of Misrata.

Libya's unity government forces have fought fierce street battles with the militants around a sprawling Kadhafi-era conference centre which once hosted international summits but now houses an ISIS command centre.

An AFP correspondent at the scene reported heavy street fighting on Friday about 2km from the Ouagadougou centre.

GNA forces used tanks, rocket launchers and artillery, the correspondent said, while the militants responded with machineguns, mortar rounds and sniper fire.

"We are fighting between houses, on the streets, and we won't back down before we eliminate them," said one GNA combatant, who declined to be named.

Warplanes have carried out air strikes around the conference centre and other ISIS positions inside the city, according to social media accounts belonging to the anti-militant operation.

The operations command, on its Facebook page, said militant positions had been targeted by 150 air strikes since mid-May.

Formed under a UN-backed power-sharing deal agreed by some Libyan lawmakers in December, the GNA has been working to assert its authority but has yet to receive the official endorsement of the country's recognised parliament.

The pro-GNA forces are mostly made up of militias from western cities, notably Misrata, and the guards of oil installations that ISIS has repeatedly tried to seize.

Emily Estelle, a North Africa and Middle East specialist with the Washington-based American Enterprise Institute, said an estimated 2,000 fighters, primarily well-equipped Misrata militiamen, were engaged in the Sirte operation.

The Misrata militiamen took part in the Nato-backed uprising five years ago against Kadhafi, who himself was found and killed outside Sirte.

According to Estelle, "American and British advisers on the ground are likely helping" the Misratans.

The forces allied with the GNA said on Thursday they expected to announce the liberation of Sirte in "two or three days", after thrusting into the city centre.

"We're encouraged by the progress they're making," said US special envoy Brett McGurk, whose country has said it has small teams of special forces gathering intelligence in Libya.

GNA head Fayez al-Sarraj called Friday on "all military forces to unite in the face of our common enemy... and to join the victorious forces".

But Ahmed al-Mesmari, a spokesman for forces loyal to a rival government based in the country's far east, described the GNA forces as "illegitimate militias, loyal to an illegitimate government".

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