Eastern Libya forces say arrested top Daesh figure

Daesh flags and slogans cover a wall in Sirte, Libya, in 2016. (File/Reuters)
Daesh flags and slogans cover a wall in Sirte, Libya, in 2016. (File/Reuters)
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Updated 15 March 2021
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Eastern Libya forces say arrested top Daesh figure

Eastern Libya forces say arrested top Daesh figure
  • The operation targeted the most prominent Daesh leader in Libya, leading to his arrest
  • Daesh gained a foothold in Libya amid the chaos that reigned after Qaddafi was toppled in 2011

TRIPOLI: Forces loyal to Libyan eastern commander Khalifa Haftar announced Sunday the arrest of a top Daesh figure in the south of the North African country.
The eastern-based marshal’s forces led an operation in the southern desert town of Ubari targeting the “most prominent leader” of Daesh in Libya, Mohamed Miloud Mohamed — who goes by Abu Omar — leading to his arrest, said a statement by Haftar’s spokesman Ahmad Al-Mesmari.
Abu Omar was among the top Daesh leaders in Libya when the group took control of the central coastal city of Sirte in 2015, the statement added.
The militants made Sirte a stronghold where they trained fighters and orchestrated attacks, including killing scores of foreign tourists in neighboring Tunisia, before they were driven out of the Libyan city in 2016.
Daesh gained a foothold in Libya amid the chaos that reigned in the country after dictator Muammar Qaddafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.
Described as a “dangerous terrorist,” Abu Omar had “close ties” with Abu Moaz Al-Iraqi, the head of Daesh in Libya, who was killed last September by pro-Haftar forces, Mesmari’s statement said.
Abu Omar is also accused of having abducted in 2015 four Italian engineers, who were freed after payment of a ransom estimated at four million euros ($4.8 million), it added.
A political crisis in the wake of Qaddafi’s overthrow saw the oil-rich country split between rival authorities in the east and west and the disintegration of security apparatuses, creating fertile ground for militant groups like Daesh to take root.
After Daesh was ousted from Sirte the group was significantly weakened in Libya, but its members have retreated into the desert or blended in with the population on the Mediterranean coast.
A new transitional government was recently approved under a UN-sponsored inter-Libyan dialogue to unify the country’s institutions and is due to be sworn in on Monday.