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Libya: Intensifying Fighting Continues

Libya: Intensifying Fighting Continues to Take Heavy Civilian Toll, Warns UN Agency

Civilians walk along Tripoli Street in Misrata, Libya. Photo: UNHCR/Helen Caux

10 October 2014 In the last three weeks alone, intensified fighting between rival armed groups in Libya has forcibly displaced nearly 290,000 people across the country, including 100,000, who urgently need food, health care and adequate shelter, especially now that winter in approaching, the UN refugee agency (UNHCR) said today.

The growing number of displaced people is outstripping the capacities of local communities, UNHCR spokesman Adrian Edwards told journalists in Geneva, adding that the agency and its partners are responding to some of the needs, but we face major constraints in access.

In recent weeks, the North African nation has been embroiled in some of the worst fighting since the 2011 uprising that ousted former leader Muammar al-Qadhafi. The Libyan parliament convened for the first time in early August of this year, welcomed by the UN as a move toward peace. However, protracted battles between opposing armed groups continue to take their toll on civilians.

According to a UNHCR statement released today, recent displacement has been around Warshefana on the outskirts of Tripoli, where fighting in recent weeks has caused some 100,000 people to flee. Additionally, some 15,000 people are estimated to be displaced around Benghazi.

Many displaced people are living with locals, some who have opened their homes to several families to meet the growing need for shelter. People unable to stay with relatives or host families sleep in schools, parks or non-residential buildings converted into emergency shelters.

For example, Ajaylat, a small town some 80 kilometres west of Tripoli, normally of about 100,000 people, is now hosting some 16,000 displaced people. With displaced people now making up more than 10 per cent of the local population, health facilities are struggling to cope.

UNHCR reports that the main hospital there is witnessing a 30 per cent increase in cases and lacks essential medical supplies and medicines for chronic illnesses such as hypertension and diabetes. Other towns across western Libya and in Benghazi are under similar strain.

Efforts to reach the displaced are often hampered by limited access to towns affecting by fighting between rival armed groups. UNHCR and partners dispatched the first relief convoy for 12,000 displaced people in western Libya in August. But additional help is urgently needed, and for this, better access is required.

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Libya: Intensifying Fighting Continues

Bombs hit near shuttered Egypt, UAE embassies in Libya – Video


Bombs hit near shuttered Egypt, UAE embassies in Libya
Twin car bombs struck near the shuttered Egyptian and United Arab Emirates embassy buildings in the militia-controlled Libyan capital on Thursday. Duration: 00:33.

By: AFP news agency

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Bombs hit near shuttered Egypt, UAE embassies in Libya - Video

Libya Is Becoming A Failed State – Video


Libya Is Becoming A Failed State
Watch Full Segment On Vice News: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bbqf27GIkaw index=5 list=UUZaT_X_mc0BI-djXOlfhqWQ Clip from the Thursday, November 13th 2014 edition of The Kyle ...

By: Secular Talk

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Libya Is Becoming A Failed State - Video

Algerie-Egypte:un porc incite sissi a attaquer gaza et libya : – Video


Algerie-Egypte:un porc incite sissi a attaquer gaza et libya :
Journaliste gyptien demande au dictateur putschiste Sissi la dclaration de guerre de l #39;gypte contre gaza et la Libye,.

By: MaNaR dz

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Algerie-Egypte:un porc incite sissi a attaquer gaza et libya : - Video

Car bombings targeted Egypt and United Arab Emirates embassies in Libya

TRIPOLI, Libya, Nov. 14 (UPI) -- Multiple car bombs were detonated Thursday morning outside the embassies of Egypt and the United Arab Emirates in the Libyan capital of Tripoli.

Both embassies were shuttered months ago due to the deteriorating security situation in Libya, and no one was reported injured in Thursday's bombings.

The symbolic attacks are likely in response to Egypt and the UAE's support for an anti-Islamist faction that moved the seat of government from militia-controlled Tripoli to Tobruk.

The UAE has launched airstrikes against the Islamist-allied militias that seized control of Tripoli earlier this year while Egyptian forces have assisted anti-Islamist military units in Benghazi.

With Tripoli controlled by militias, Parliament -- Libya's only internationally recognized government body -- relocated to Tobruk, where the Cabinet of Prime Minister Adbullah al-Thani was sworn in this past September.

The Islamist coalition in Tripoli, the self-proclaimed General National Congress, does not recognize al-Thani's government, which has been recognized internationally and by the United Nations. Libya's Supreme Court ordered the dissolution of the Parliament on Nov.6 after Islamist members of the House of Representatives questioned the constitutionality of moving the legislature out of the capital.

Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Malta, Spain, the United Kingdom, and the United States issued a joint statement last week in response to the political and security developments in Libya, urging "all parties to cease all military operations and to refrain from taking any steps which increase the polarization and divisions in the country."

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Car bombings targeted Egypt and United Arab Emirates embassies in Libya