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Libya expects more oil production soon, report

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The Libya Herald reported Sunday operations of the Abu Attifel oil field, last producing around 70,000 barrels of oil per day, may restart soon. The report said Italian energy company Eni stopped operations at the field "in August 2013 following the occupation and closure of oil export terminals by secessionist protestors."

More than 1,000 demonstrators descended on the facility in late 2013 demanding jobs.

"It is not yet clear what deal, if any, has been reached between the locals and the Libyan National Oil Co., which will allow Abu Attifel to restart production," the Herald reported.

Before NATO forces intervened in Libyan civil war in 2011, the country was producing more than 1 million bpd. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries in its latest market report said production from member-state Libya was around 300,000 bpd.

Libya has been unable to coordinate political efforts across the wide range of groups vying for more power since civil war ended. In late March, the U.N. Support Mission in Libya said it welcomed cease-fire agreements and the withdrawal of fighters from oil production areas.

"[UNSMIL] has urged the parties to the conflict to cease all military hostilities and focus instead on their common enemy, the terrorist groups which are determined to expand their areas of influence," the mission said.

The group calling itself the Islamic State has gained influence in war-torn Libya.

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Libya expects more oil production soon, report

Tunisia fears violence spillover from Libya – Video


Tunisia fears violence spillover from Libya
Reports have emerged that Islamist rebel groups in Syria have set up an administrative council in the eastern part of the country, an area now largely under ... Clashes have broken out between...

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Tunisia fears violence spillover from Libya - Video

Libya rejects U.S.-led offensive against Islamic State, seeks aid

Libyas top diplomat in Washington wants aggressive U.S. support in containing the Islamic States rise in her nation but strongly rejects the idea of an American-led bombing or ground offensive, saying it would just make things worse.

In an acknowledgment of how poorly some in the region see the U.S.-led campaign against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq, the charge daffairs of the Libyan Embassy in Washington said replicating that strategy in Libya would likely draw more foreign fighters into the nation.

We dont want Libya to become a land for the jihadists from all over, said Wafa Bugaighis, who told reporters during a roundtable discussion that there are already more than 5,000 fighters on Libyan soil aligned with the Islamic State, also known as ISIS and ISIL.

PHOTOS: Top 10 U.S. fighter jets

At the same time, Mrs. Bugaighis lamented Washingtons ambivalence toward backing what she described as the only legitimate and democratically elected government in Libya as it attempts to contain the Islamic State.

The government, which has operated out of the northeastern Libyan city of Tobruk since an Islamist parliament took over Tripoli last year, is in dire need of military training and hardware, as well as counterterrorism intelligence sharing from the West, she said.

This is the support we really want, she said. If you dry up the resources of funds and arms to [the extremists], then I think our institutions, our national institutions if they are supported by equipping and training and arms they can take care of it.

There is, however, a catch.

The Obama administration has shown little willingness to engage deeply in Libya since the 2012 terrorist attack there that killed Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens and three other Americans. The overall posture of withdrawal has seemed only to accelerate since last year, when Libyas chaotic election gave rise to two separate governments now vying for control of the nation.

Washington and its European allies have offered rhetorical support for Mrs. Bugaighis government, which is pushing a secular message from Tobruk.

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Libya rejects U.S.-led offensive against Islamic State, seeks aid

Libya: Internal Conflict and Plunging Oil Prices Strangling Economy

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Internal conflict and plunging oil prices are strangling Libya's economy

Libya is rapidly joining the ranks of Africa's better-known failed states: Central African Republic, Somalia and South Sudan. The north African country, once boasting one of the continent's highest per capita GDPs, is a shadow of its former self: torn apart by armed conflict and now felled by falling oil prices and declining production.

More than three years since the NATO-backed toppling of Colonel Muammar Qaddafi, Libya "may exist as an entity of international law but, in reality, it doesn't exist anymore," said Slimane Zeghidour, political analyst with France's TV5 Monde. "There is no authority recognised by even half of the country."

Islamist militia groups control the capital, Tripoli, and Benghazi, the second-largest city. The internationally recognised government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni has fled to Tobruk, a port city in the east.

The conflict has taken a heavy toll on the economy of north Africa's biggest oil producer. "GDP growth is estimated to have fallen by almost 30% last year, mostly driven by a sharp decline in oil production (down 51% in 2014 from 2013) and oil exports (down 75% in 2014 from 2013)," said Marouane El Abassi, the World Bank's resident representative to Libya.

Libya's official Parliament - still in Tripoli at the time - approved the latest budget, worth 56.5 billion Libyan dinars ($41.6 billion), in June 2014. The budget was based on projections of 26 billion Libyan dinars ($19.1 billion) in oil revenue and an annual oil production of 600,000 barrels per day (bpd) at $100 a barrel, Mohamed Abdullah, the head of the budget committee, told Reuters at the time.

But two months after the budget was approved, Libya Dawn (an alliance of Islamist militias close to the Muslim Brotherhood) chased Mr Thinni's government from Tripoli and the country lurched towards civil war.

By the end of 2014, amid fighting between official government troops and Libya Dawn militias for the control of key oil fields, terminals and ports, oil production was down to less than 300,000 bpd, according to the IMF. This is less than a fifth of the 1.6m bpd Libya was pumping before Mr Qaddafi was toppled in 2011.

Plunging oil prices since mid-2014 have dealt a second blow to Libya's economy. "The budget was made on the assumption that the oil price would stay at $100 per barrel," said Mohammed El-Qorchi, IMF mission chief for Libya. "But the situation is different now that the price has dropped."

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Libya: Internal Conflict and Plunging Oil Prices Strangling Economy

4 dead in Libya suicide bombing claimed by ISIS

Media say 21 people are wounded after the bomber blew up a vehicle packed with explosives

STRIFE-TORN. Fighters loyal to Libya's parliament General National Congress prepare to launch attacks as they continue to fight Islamic State (ISIS) on the outskirts city of Sirte, Libya, on March 16, 2015. Photo by STR/EPA

TRIPOLI, Libya A suicide bomber killed 4 people outside Libya's militia-controlled 3rd city Misrata on Sunday, April 5, in an attack claimed by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) group.

The LANA news agency of the militia-backed Tripoli administration said 21 people were also wounded when the bomber blew up a vehicle packed with explosives at the Saddada checkpoint east of the city.

ISIS radio Al-Bayan said a Sudanese volunteer it named as Abu Dujana had carried out the attack on behalf of its Tripolitania branch.

The jihadist group, notorious for its brutal rule of swathes of Iraq and Syria, has established branches in all 3 of Libya's historic regions.

In February, the Tripolitania branch posted grisly video of the beheadings of 21 Christians, mostly Egyptians, prompting Cairo to launch retaliatory air strikes on jihadist targets in the North African country.

In January, the group claimed an assault on a luxury hotel in the capital popular with diplomats and officials in which at least 9 people including 5 foreigners were killed.

The country has had two governments and parliaments since the Libya Dawn militia seized Tripoli in August and the internationally recognized government fled to the country's far east. Rappler.com

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4 dead in Libya suicide bombing claimed by ISIS