Libya FM calls for international air strikes against IS

Libya FM calls for international air strikes against IS
Libya's internationally-recognised foreign minister Mohamed al-Dayri has called for international air strikes against IS and a lifting of an arms embargo.
2 min read
26 August, 2015
Dayri has called for international air strikes against IS [Getty]

Libya's foreign minister on Tuesday renewed a call for the lifting of an arms embargo and for international air strikes to help tackle the Islamic State group [IS] which threatens to create a "rear base" in the country.

"The situation is extremely serious," Mohammed al-Dayri, foreign minister for Libya's internationally-recognised government based in Tobruk, told AFP on a visit to Paris.

"People are dying, are crucified, are disinterred from their graves, are burned alive. Libyans don't understand why the international community doesn't wake up to these dangers," he added.

    

People are dying, are crucified, are disinterred from their graves, are burned alive. 

- Mohammed al-Dayri

Libya has two rival governments and has been torn apart since the international community helped oust its leader Moammar Gaddafi in 2011.

One government, which Dayri is part of, controls most eastern regions after fleeing Tripoli in July 2014, driven out by a motley coalition of Islamists and militants.

Dayri said IS was present in the towns of Derna, Benghazi, Sirte and Sabratha.

IS now controls a 200km stretch of the coastline between Sirte and Ben Jawad, including the Awlad Sulaiman town of Huwara.

"They have not yet seized oil fields, but we fear they might come to control several wells," he said.

"On Saturday, there was a call from their leaders in Iraq and Syria to reinforce their ranks in Libya. They want to make Libya a rear base."

He said IS currently had limited means in Libya and had faced pushback from local populations working alongside other armed Islamist groups including al-Qaeda, notably in Derna in June.

"After 2011, Libya was abandoned to its fate," said Dayri.

He called for the UN to lift the arms embargo imposed in 2011.

"We are not talking about sophisticated military equipment, but we need the minimum to fight terrorism in an adequate manner," he said.

"We also hope for [international] intervention as soon as possible because the danger is growing. But not troops on the ground. We are hoping for aerial support for the Libyan armed forces on the ground.

"The international community waited for Mosul to fall before intervening in Iraq. We don't want to see Tripoli or Misrata fall," he said.

The military chief of Libya's internationally-recognised government said on Monday that a lack of weapons is preventing his forces from launching an offensive on the Islamic State group extremists in the city of Sirte.