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UN fears Daesh in Libya could relocate from Sirte

By AFP - Jul 19,2016 - Last updated at Jul 19,2016

Libyan forces allied with the UN-backed government play table football at the frontline in the West part of Sirte, Libya, on Tuesday (Reuters photo)

UNITED NATIONS, United States — UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon warned on Monday that the Daesh terror group militants could set up new cells across Libya and north Africa as they are driven from their stronghold of Sirte.

Ban outlined the threat from foreign terrorist fighters (FTF) in Libya in a confidential report to the Security Council, obtained by AFP.

"The recent pressure against ISIL [Daesh] in Libya could lead its members, including FTFs, to relocate and regroup in smaller and geographically dispersed cells throughout Libya and in neighbouring countries," Ban said in the report.

The defeat of Daesh militants in Sirte "appears to be a distinct possibility", leading many to flee south as well as west, to Tunisia. 

"The future impact of scattered ISIL combatants on southern local armed groups may become an issue of concern," he said.

Libyan forces allied with the UN-backed government in Tripoli have been battling to take Sirte from Daesh fighters for the past two months. 

The coastal city is considered one of Daesh’s most important rear bases outside of Syria and Iraq. There are between 2,000 and 5,000 Daesh militants from Libya, Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, Mali, Morocco and Mauritania deployed in Sirte, Tripoli and Derna, according to the report. 

Dozens of foreign fighters from Tunisia have returned home from Libya "with the intent to conduct attacks", it added.

The ties extend further afield, with funds from Libya sent to Ansar Bait Al Maqdis, an extremist group that operates in Egypt's Sinai peninsula, the report said.

Ban said Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb, which is active in Mali and across the Sahel region, continues to use Libya as a sanctuary and a base to buy arms and ammunition. 

 

Mokhtar Belmokhtar, leader of the Al Mourabitoun group active in the Sahel, is able to travel throughout Libya with relative ease while the head of Ansar Dine in northern Mali, Iyad Ag Ghaly, maintains a foothold in southern Libya, the report said. 

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