Car bomb, clashes with IS kill 32 Libya unity govt forces: military

EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / Libyan pro-government forces celebrate in front of the commercial bank on May 18, 2016 in Abu Grein, south of Libya’s third city Misrata, a day after Libya’s unity government recaptured the area from the Islamic State (IS) group.
four of the Bodies of The organization of the Islamic State (Daash) in a truck in Abu Qurayn About 300 km east of the Libyan capital Tripoli , on May 18, 2016.
The UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) forces said on Facebook that they recaptured Abu Grein strategic crossroads, where the coastal highway meets the main road south into the desert interior on May 17, 2016.
/ AFP PHOTO /

TRIPOLI , Libya (AFP) — Thirty-two fighters loyal to Libya’s unity government were killed in clashes with Islamic State group jihadists and a car bombing Wednesday near the IS stronghold of Sirte, the military said.

“The toll of today’s martyrs reached 32, and 50 others were wounded,” the operations room set up by the new Government of National Unity (GNA) said on its Facebook page and Twitter account late Wednesday, updating an earlier toll of 18 dead.

Of the earlier toll, seven died in a car bomb attack in Buairat el-Hassun, 60 kilometers (35 miles) west of Sirte and the others were killed in an IS foray in Abu Grein, further west, that the GNA recaptured on Tuesday.

The GNA on Tuesday called for warplanes to bomb IS after world powers showed readiness to arm it.

On Monday, the United States, Italy and Libya’s allies and neighbours agreed in Vienna to arm the GNA to confront the threat from IS.

Clashes on Tuesday claimed the lives of seven members of the GNA forces and wounded 15.

IS overran Abu Grein on May 5 as part of a series of forays into territory controlled by the UN-backed government, including a deadly attack a week later on a checkpoint at Saddada, 50 kilometers to the west.

The latest fighting comes as IS seeks to expand westwards out of Sirte, slain dictator Moamer Kadhafi’s hometown on the Mediterranean coast, which it has controlled since last June.

Europe fears the jihadists could use Sirte’s port and airport as a springboard to attack the continent.

The international community, particularly European powers, are also concerned about a stream of refugees and migrants crossing the Mediterranean from Libya’s unsecured coast.

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