Libya News and Interests

because there was no government to defend. The institutions crumbled with Qadaffi's demise.
it was a paper tiger upheld by militia rule, in fact there was no Libya-just warring factions.
The Prime Minister was kidnapped/Parliament was shelled running up to 2014 when the current civil war became hot again. Neighborhoods has no local security except for militias they hired, there was no central Libyan government to protect them...where would special forces fit in here?

western Special forces have no popular support to this day. most of Libyan factions want nothing to do with the west except the GNA, which allows in the special forces partnering with the Misrata Brigades who acted as their army to liberate Sirte from ISIS..General Hiftar is allying with Russia....the GNA is still a paper tiger.
Which is exactly why soldiers under the auspices of the UN should have been sent in to disarm the various factions and offer them the chance to join a Libyan National Army. This should have been done immediately before battle lines were drawn irrevocably. This would have given ample opportunity to seek and neutralise all the rebel brigades that refused to join.

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To piss off snowflakes, bottom feeders and racists
 
^ no way was the USA/NATO going to risk boots on the ground for Libya.
Hilary's "smart power" was a deliberate attempt at cheap interventionism.No boots -just bombs
 
Fighting in Libya’s Capital as One Government Seizes Another’s Compound

Armed groups aligned with a Libyan government in Tripoli that is backed by the United Nations took over a compound occupied by the leader of a rival government on Wednesday after heavy fighting that spread to several parts of the city.

The offices of a television station sympathetic to the self-declared government opposed to the one backed by the United Nations were burned down in the clashes, and the channel went off air. A hospital was also hit.

The fighting apparently was set off on Monday by a dispute over control of a bank in the Hay al-Andalus neighborhood. It then escalated into power struggles between militias loyal to the rival governments: the Government of National Accord, which is backed by the United Nations, and the self-declared National Salvation Government.

Tripoli, Libya’s capital, is controlled by a patchwork of armed groups that have built local fiefs and vied for power since Libya’s 2011 uprising.

Gunfights continued for much of Tuesday in western Tripoli before spreading to southern neighborhoods after sunset. Gunfire and explosions could be heard late into the night, with tanks and other heavy weapons deployed on the streets.

By Wednesday, the Government of National Accord had posted guards outside the Rixos hotel complex, where the leader of the National Salvation Government, Khalifa al-Ghwell, had established a base

Offices and hotels near Tripoli’s western seafront were also hit by missiles or shelling, and a hospital in the Abu Salim district caught fire when it was hit during the fighting.

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Wednesday, a member of Libyan security forces looked at an office occupied by the leader of a rival government after it was taken over by armed groups supporting a rival government backed by the United Nations.
 
Here is a run-down of the key militias vying for clout in Libya:

- The west -

The GNA signed a ceasefire deal Thursday ending four days of clashes with rival militias, including groups allied with former prime minister Khalifa Ghweil.

Ghweil was ousted from power when the GNA took office in March 2016 and has refused to recognise the new administration.

But while Thursday's deal has consolidated GNA control over parts of the capital, dozens of militias still operate there -- including several who support Ghweil.

The GNA's main backers in the capital include: the First Force, operating in Tripoli's east and centre; the Deterrence Force, an Islamist group running police-like operations in the city's east; and the Abu Slim Brigade controlling the southern working-class district of the same name.

The powerful militias of third city Misrata, east of Tripoli, also have major clout in the capital.

They played a vital role in the battle to topple Kadhafi and have been influential power-brokers in Libya ever since. They control swathes of the west including Misrata itself and districts of Tripoli.

Last year they formed the backbone of a pro-GNA coalition that ousted the Islamic State group from its coastal bastion Sirte, which they still control.

But some Misrata militias back Ghweil or Islamist militias who follow controversial Sheikh Sadek al-Ghariani, who opposes both of Libya's rival administrations.

- The east -

Troops commanded by Haftar this week ousted the Islamist Benghazi Defence Brigades from two key oil export terminals they had seized in early March.

That puts Haftar's self-proclaimed Libyan National Army (LNA) in control of much of Libya's east from the Oil Crescent to the Egyptian border -- except for Derna, which is controlled by pro-Qaeda jihadists.

The LNA includes former Libyan army officers, militiamen, fighters from allied tribes, and some Islamist fighters.

Haftar opposes the GNA, but for two years his main priority has been battling jihadists in second city Benghazi.

An array of Islamist militias have unified ranks to fight him.

Among them are the BDB and the Revolutionary Shura Council of Benghazi, an alliance of Islamist militias that includes the Al-Qaeda-linked Ansar Al-Sharia.

- The south -

Southern Libya is criss-crossed by smuggling routes for people, drugs and weapons. A mosaic of tribal and ethnic forces are fighting for control of illicit trade and oil fields there.

They include Tuaregs who control the border with southern Algeria. Further east, the Tubu people operates along the borders with Chad and Sudan.

Arab tribes in the region have supported authorities in western Libya but maintain close ties with the both west and east. They regularly clash with the Tubu.
 
tag:reuters.com,2017:newsml_LYNXMPED2H0JD:12017-03-18T201856Z_1_LYNXMPED2H0JD_RTROPTP_3_LIBYA-SECURITY.JPG


Members of East Libyan forces gesture as they sit atop a tank after they captured the final holdout of Islamist-led rivals in the southwest of Benghazi, Libya, March 18, 2017.

East Libyan army takes rivals' final holdout in southwest Benghazi
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-idUSKBN16P0LZ
East Libyan forces said they captured the final holdout of Islamist-led rivals in the southwest of Benghazi on Saturday, ending weeks of resistance by fighters camped in a cluster of apartment blocks.

The eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) has been waging a campaign in Libya's second biggest city for nearly three years and still faces pockets of resistance in two northern neighborhoods, despite making big gains since early last year.

Milad al-Zwai, spokesman for the LNA's special forces, said the siege at the "12 blocks" site ended when rival fighters tried to escape at dawn. He said 23 were killed and six arrested while seven LNA troops were killed and at least six wounded.


Dozens of family members had also been in the besieged buildings, where according to humanitarian groups they had run out of food and water.

Efforts to evacuate the families had largely failed. Mismari said six families were detained by the LNA and would be investigated. It was not immediately clear how many of the LNA's opponents or their families had escaped.

The LNA also said it had lost a MiG-21 fighter jet over the Benghazi district of Sabri on Saturday, though the pilot had ejected. It still faces armed opposition in the northern neighborhoods of Sabri and Souq al-Hout.

LNA leader Khalifa Haftar launched his Dignity Operation in Benghazi in May 2014, saying he wanted to rid the city of Islamist militants following a series of bombings and assassinations.

Some of his opponents have openly acknowledged their allegiance to Islamic State or al Qaeda-linked groups but others say they are fighting to prevent a return to authoritarian rule in Libya.

Haftar has rejected a beleaguered U.N.-backed government in Tripoli that was meant to reunite the country after it split between eastern- and western-based governments and military factions in 2014.

n Friday, there were demonstrations against militia rule in central Tripoli after unusually violent clashes this week, and some voiced support for Haftar before the protests were broken up amid gunfire.

A group of 22 militias based in Tripoli issued a statement on Friday reasserting their opposition to the LNA leader.
 
Libya's National Oil Company says expects to regain Es Sider, Ras Lanuf oil ports
http://www.reuters.com/article/us-libya-security-oil-idUSKBN16Q0CK
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A view shows the oil port of Es Sider, Libya, March 16, 2017. Picture taken March 16, 2017. REUTERS/Esam Omran Al-Fetori
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ibya's National Oil Corporation (NOC) has been coordinating with military forces from eastern Libya and has "no reason to believe" it will not regain control of the Es Sider and Ras Lanuf oil ports, NOC's chairman said.

The loss and recapture of the ports this month by the eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) had raised doubts over its willingness to let the Tripoli-based NOC manage the ports.

Revenue from the sites is controlled by a central bank and U.N.-backed government in the capital which pro-LNA factions oppose.

Eastern officials accuse rivals in Tripoli and the western city of Misrata of supporting a March 3 attack on the ports by a faction known as the Benghazi Defense Brigades (BDB).

An oil guard commander appointed by the U.N.-backed government was deployed to secure them.

After they were retaken, the head of a Benghazi NOC office appointed by Libya's eastern government, Naji al-Maghrabi, said he was pulling out of an NOC unification deal signed in July and an LNA spokesman said there would be no immediate decision on a handover.

But in written responses provided to Reuters, Mustafa Sanalla, the Tripoli-based NOC chairman, said his staff had already been working with the LNA.

"
We have been coordinating our assessment of the facilities with them," Sanalla said, in his first public comments since the ports were retaken.
"We have no reason to believe control of the ports will not be handed back to NOC."
Es Sider and Ras Lanuf have a combined potential capacity of 600,000 barrels per day (bpd).

Operations there and at two other ports southwest of Benghazi are crucial to the NOC's efforts to revive Libya's output, which has been crippled by years of conflict and political chaos.

The LNA took over the ports in September, ending a two-year blockade at three of them and quickly inviting the NOC to resume exports.

Es Sider and Ras Lanuf were badly damaged in previous rounds of fighting and have been operating well below normal levels. The latest clashes, which included ground battles and more than a week of LNA air strikes, had dented the LNA's claim it could defend the ports and led to fears that facilities would suffer further damage.

But Waha Oil Company resumed pumping to Es Sider on Saturday and Sanalla said the NOC had decided to restart operations at the ports based on technical assessments and a review by military engineers.

"For the most part, the facilities are not damaged. In one or two locations, some work needs to be done by the military engineers. Our workers are returning to their terminals gradually."

Reuters journalists observed little apparent additional damage to the ports during a visit on Thursday.

An engineer at the Waha oil field said on Sunday it was pumping 25,000 bpd to Es Sider as it restarted production. The NOC said 13,000 bpd were being pumped from Defah field, and that Waha's production should reach 80,000 bpd by the end of March.

Sanalla said the NOC was hoping to raise overall production to 800,000 bpd by the end of April from 611,000 bpd currently.

Libya along with Nigeria has been exempted from production cuts recently agreed by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC).

Oil facilities are protected by the Petroleum Facilities Guard (PFG) but PFG units often operate independently or for a particular political faction.
Putting the PFG under the NOC would, we think, go a long way to removing Libya's oil assets as an object of military competition," he said.
 
March 19 marks six years since the United States began its “humanitarian intervention” in Libya with the help of NATO. Amid the Arab Spring uprisings against authoritarian governments in the region, intervention in Libya was justified under the concept of “responsibility to protect.” The intervention ended in regime change, leaving many critical that the norm was abused for imperialist means, rather than humanitarian sentiments.

n the case of Libya, the R2P concept was used by the UN Security Council to condemn Libyan President Moammar Gadhafi’s regime, impose sanctions and then justify intervention into the country by “all necessary means” to protect civilians. There was concern that unrest and violence under Gadhafi would lead to serious human rights abuses. Others, however, have argued that the NATO intervention was more about wanting to control Libyan oil, than it was for humanitarian motives.
Well before the Security Council resolutions, Gadhafi had been demonized by the West as an evil authoritarian dictator.

the Libya intervention overstepped the bounds of R2P and soon morphed into a full-blown military operation. While speed was seen as critical in Libya, the intervention dragged on for more than seven months and ended with the killing of Gadhafi.

The push for international intervention in Libya was not without dissent. In particular, Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa — known as the BRICS countries — were concerned as to how exactly an R2P-style intervention would be carried out, particularly when ceasefire offers were rejected and Libyan rebel forces were given support.

As former Australian Foreign Minister and one of the primary architects behind the original R2P norm, Gareth Evans noted in 2012, “The BRICS complaints were not about the initial military response, but what came shortly after, when it became clear that the U.S., Britain and France were set on regime change.”
 
Khalifa Haftar's self-styled “Libyan National Army” has exhumed the body of Benghazi Shura Council commander Jalal Makhzoum from his Ganfouda grave after 5 days of his death and put his body on public display, in another heinous crime by the army, which is overpowered by gangs and radical Salafist groups.

Makhzoum was killed on March 14 during clashes in the 12 Buildings block in Ganfouda. On Saturday, the so-called LNA took control of the buildings after fighters of Benghazi Shura Council broke their siege and managed to escape with the families in an operation that left more than 20 of them dead and others prisoners.

Later, Haftar’s forces exhumed the body of Jalal Makhzoum and paraded with him through the streets before hanging him outside Saiga Camp for public display, in violation of all Islamic teachings and international human rights laws.

 
if this is not epic apocalyptic then I believe global climates can be regulated by legislation of foolish and wicked people. I hope the us gov. and Russia, Israel, Egypt, etc...[without any UN input at all] will blitzkrieg the enemies of liberty and sovereignty. wishful thinking. thanks for the updates. it is of global frontlines importance.
 
^ no way was the USA/NATO going to risk boots on the ground for Libya.
Hilary's "smart power" was a deliberate attempt at cheap interventionism.No boots -just bombs
I am saying what should have happened, of course with the benefit of 20/20 hindsight we know this didn't happen.
Which is exactly why soldiers under the auspices of the UN should have been sent in to disarm the various factions and offer them the chance to join a Libyan National Army. This should have been done immediately before battle lines were drawn irrevocably. This would have given ample opportunity to seek and neutralise all the rebel brigades that refused to join.

Sent from Lenovo K5 Note:
To piss off snowflakes, bottom feeders and racists
 
gettyimages-109918394.jpg


he new year seems to have brought one piece of bad news after another for Libya, threatening to mark a new phase in the country’s endless slide into chaos. Hopes that last year’s defeat of the Islamic State in its self-proclaimed “emirate” in Sirte would usher in a period of relative calm have been dashed, as fighting has escalated recently in four different parts of the country.

The “oil crescent” east of Sirte, where 60 percent of Libya’s oil production transits, in March twice changed hands between the anti-Islamist Libyan National Army (LNA) of Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar — a former Qaddafi-era officer who turned against the dictator and whose forces currently dominate the east — and the U.N.-backed Presidency Council, a collective head of state that sits in the capital of Tripoli, where militias nominally loyal to the council fight against rival groups — and increasingly among themselves.
In the south, Haftar’s LNA has repeatedly clashed with armed groups from the coastal city of Misrata. And in the east, since 2014, fighting between the LNA and local Islamist Shura Councils in Benghazi and in Derna has never really ended.

Since 2014, the country has been split between rival governments: one in the east and two in Tripoli. In May of that year, then-Gen. Haftar started Operation Dignity, an anti-Islamist insurgency that initially focused on the eastern city of Benghazi. A month later, a coalition of militias from cities in western Libya formed Libya Dawn and conquered Tripoli. The conflict between the forces that defeated Muammar al-Qaddafi has since devolved into a bitter struggle for power, resources, and control of the country’s sprawling security sector.

In December 2015, the mediation of the U.N. mission in Libya (UNSMIL) led to the signing of the Libyan Political Agreement, which aimed to form a national unity government, by rival members of parliament from eastern and western Libya. But while UNSMIL is tasked with negotiating the implementation of the agreement, it is now effectively headless.
The mandate of the current U.N. special representative for Libya, Martin Kobler, came to an end this month, and he lost the trust of key players in Libya long ago. U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres’s attempts to appoint former Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad as his special representative came up against an 11th-hour veto from U.S. President Donald Trump’s administration.

Rival negotiating tracks by regional powers, particularly Egypt and Algeria, have also failed to produce any breakthrough. As a result, most channels of communication between eastern and western Libya have collapsed.

Russia is becoming increasingly involved, trying to fill the void left by the collapse of the U.N. track and the disinterest of both the Trump administration and the Europeans. It is unclear what Moscow really wants in Libya, but it seems to be pursuing a strategy that acknowledges the de facto partition of the country, promising both political and military support for Haftar’s battle in the east while signing contracts for oil and discussing business opportunities in commodities trading and future construction projects with the institutions in Tripoli.
While there are reports that Russian special forces may be helping Haftar, there is still no evidence of decisive Russian military support for the LNA, and it is fair to say that the Kremlin is diversifying its political investment in the country by talking to all sides.

Russia’s increasing political backing and the anti-Islamist winds blowing in Washington have strengthened Haftar’s belief that there is no point in negotiating a political solution with the forces in western Libya.
Despite heavy pressure from his Egyptian patrons, he refused to even meet the head of the Presidency Council, Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj, in Cairo on Feb. 14 to discuss a road map for negotiations. He has instead rededicated himself to his main goal of “fighting extremism” by stepping up pressure on Misratan forces in the south and the district of Jufra and by announcing an imminent — albeit unlikely — “liberation” of Tripoli.

Western Libya, meanwhile, is at risk of ever greater fragmentation. The Presidency Council has effectively been reduced to two of its originally nine members — Sarraj and his deputy, Ahmed Maiteeq — and lacks any real control of dynamics on the ground. The capital is dominated by a syndicate of militias that are now fighting against armed groups loyal to a rival government. Outside of Tripoli, a similar archipelago of local armed groups controls events on the ground.

Given the lack of desire to compromise in the east and lack of credible interlocutors in the west, a political settlement reuniting the country will likely prove elusive. If Libya and the international community hope to avoid a bloody new chapter in the civil war, they should focus on three tracks to be pursued in the short term, in parallel to the bigger-picture negotiations.

First, Libya needs a de-conflicting mechanism to avoid escalation. If the U.N. envoy cannot do it, someone else in the West should. What better opportunity for Britain to show its continued relevance after Brexit than this? Or why not the French foreign minister, who could beef up his legacy just weeks before leaving office? This should only be a temporary replacement for a fully functioning U.N. mission capable of working on reconciliation, local cease-fires, and monitoring human rights violations. Both a temporary negotiator and the U.N. could work on a number of confidence-building measures, such as establishing permanent channels of communication, liberating prisoners, reopening roads, and sharing humanitarian aid.

Second, the country needs what economist Hala Bugaighis calls a “Libyan Economic Agreement” on how to peacefully share its oil wealth. Libya sits on Africa’s biggest hydrocarbon reserves: In the run-up to the 2011 war, it produced 1.6 million barrels per day and accumulated more than $100 billion in reserves — a considerable amount for a population of 6 million. Much of the fighting in the last few years has revolved around oil installations or smuggling hubs. Negotiating a new social contract may take some time, but in the meantime, two measures would represent a good start: The government in Tripoli should strengthen financial support for all of Libya’s municipalities, including areas controlled by Haftar, and oil installations should be placed under the control of the independent National Oil Corporation in Tripoli, with attempts to establish parallel economic institutions punished by international sanctions.

Finally, Tripoli must be the heart of international efforts. The most pressing need is a plan to free the city of all heavy weapons, pushing militias to stock them outside of civilian-populated areas. This is an important condition to allow the Libyan government to operate and to facilitate international assistance.

These tasks are very difficult. The alternative, however, is a new escalation that would destroy what little is left of Libya’s institutions and create the conditions for the re-emergence of jihadi groups.



It will take a heavyweight like the United States to push Libya toward peace. Washington, with its enormous soft and hard power, could pressure all sides into an agreement while at the same time dissuading external actors from intervening in the country. The big question is whether the will exists in the Trump administration to get involved in Libya. The National Security Council, in reviewing U.S. policy in different areas, should consider the levers that the United States has in Libya and the importance of the country in countering terrorism and instability.

During the most recent Republican administration, under President George W. Bush, the United States pursued a pragmatic policy in Libya that succeeded in peacefully eliminating the country’s stockpiles of weapons of mass destruction. It is hard to believe that Trump will be able to duplicate that model. Without swift international action, however, Libya appears poised for another round of violence. It may well be that we will look back at this moment in Libya and say that the medicine was there but no doctor had the courage to use it
http://foreignpolicy.com/2017/03/23/can-trump-arrest-libyas-dwnward-spiral-civil-war-united-states/
 
Western Libya, meanwhile, is at risk of ever greater fragmentation. The Presidency Council has effectively been reduced to two of its originally nine members — Sarraj and his deputy, Ahmed Maiteeq — and lacks any real control of dynamics on the ground. The capital is dominated by a syndicate of militias that are now fighting against armed groups loyal to a rival government. Outside of Tripoli, a similar archipelago of local armed groups controls events on the ground.
now the western govt's are divided..milita rule runs wild -killing each other, and blowing up political offices, while the eastern gov't aligns with Russia.
Ain't NATO grand??
 
Pentagon wants to keep ground troops in Libya
http://www.militarytimes.com/articles/russians-libya-islamic-state
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The U.S. military will keep an unspecified number of ground troops in Libya to help friendly forces further degrade the Islamic State faction there, and officials are seeking new leeway to target al Qaida loyalists in Somalia, the top commander overseeing operations in Africa said Friday.

the last major U.S. operation in Libya occurred during mid-January, when American warplanes unleashed a massive attack on two Islamic State training camps, killing an estimated 80 militants who had fled the group's crumbling stronghold. The strike was enabled, Waldhauser said, by U.S. personnel who'd spent several weeks coordinating face-to-face with allies to ensure there would be no collateral damage.
Asked about Moscow's potential involvement in Libya, Waldhauser confirmed Russian operatives are "on the ground in the area" but sought to walk back his earlier suggestion they have in fact crossed into Libya from their outpost in Egypt. Regardless, Russia is attempting to influence the security environment there, the general said, and reestablish financial ties — Libya is flush with oil and a target market for Russian-made weapons — that were lost after Gaddafi's demise.

The head of U.S. forces in Africa told reporters on Friday there was an "undeniable" link between Russia and powerful Libyan commander Khalifa Haftar, underscoring U.S. concerns about Moscow's deepening role in Libya.
 
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Unnamed armed factions have blocked production at the Sharara and Wafa fields in western Libya, cutting the country’s total output by 252,000 bpd, Reuters reported today, citing a source from the National Oil Corporation.

Sharara alone produced 220,000 bpd before the shutdown, accounting for a large chunk of Libya’s overall 700,000 bpd production. It started pumping oil after a two-year pause last December. Later this week, a tanker commissioned by Austria’s OMV is supposed to load 600,000 barrels of Sharara crude from the Zawyia port. According to sources, the loading can still take place from crude stored at the port.
 
1267d797b73a96e6406b705cf7775fb4.jpg


Unnamed armed factions have blocked production at the Sharara and Wafa fields in western Libya, cutting the country’s total output by 252,000 bpd, Reuters reported today, citing a source from the National Oil Corporation.

Sharara alone produced 220,000 bpd before the shutdown, accounting for a large chunk of Libya’s overall 700,000 bpd production. It started pumping oil after a two-year pause last December. Later this week, a tanker commissioned by Austria’s OMV is supposed to load 600,000 barrels of Sharara crude from the Zawyia port. According to sources, the loading can still take place from crude stored at the port.
Remind me again why a multinational force couldn't have been sent in to stabilise Libya after Ghaddafi was deposed.

Sent from my Lenovo K6 Note
 
Remind me again why a multinational force couldn't have been sent in to stabilise Libya after Ghaddafi was deposed.
Sent from my Lenovo K6 Note
look back on this thread..we've hashed that out a couple times.
you have your views, I have mine.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4365870/Over-ONE-MILLION-migrants-pipeline-Libya.html
More than ONE MILLION migrants hoping to cross to Europe are 'in the pipeline' in Libya: Senior diplomat warns EU has done 'too little, too late' to tackle the crisis

Joseph Walker-Cousins, ex-head of the British Embassy Office in Benghazi, said refugees were massing in war-torn country
He added that European Union naval mission to stem flow of migrants was 'incentivising failure' including drownings
Also critical of West's failure to continue offering ‘leadership’ after prompting collapse of Gadaffi regime
 
50-libyan-dinar-note.jpg

Libyan dinar before 2013 ( Qadaffi imprint)

Libyan-dinar.jpg

current Libyan dinar ( front and back)

Libyan economic situation just keeps worsening for both Libyans and foreigners living in there, as the foreign currency exchange rates keep soaring every day more than the other.

This week and up until Wednesday, the dollar exchange rate has hit LYD7.10 per $1 in the black market, while in the official rates, which are enjoyed by politicians and lobbyists, as observers say, $1 costs only LYD1.47.

The dollar rates have been fluctuating lately since the start of 2017, with not once the one dollar going below LYD6 – at least for two consecutive days.

Moreover, the dollar rates hit a record high last year when $1 reached LYD8 for one full day, then dropped to 7-ish for several days, before it had rested at the boundaries of 6 Libyan dinars per one dollar.
 
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Libya/Chad border strewn with munitions

Southern Libya remains a region of endemic instability wracked by communal conflict, a shortage of basic services, rampant smuggling, and fragmented or collapsed institutions. The region has long existed on the periphery of Libya’s politics and international concerns—but that must change. Increasingly, the vacuum of governance in the south has drawn in political actors from northern Libya and outside states. Extremists seeking refuge in the south and migrants being smuggled through the region directly impact the security of Libya, neighboring states like Tunisia, and Europe.
Sources of Insecurity in the South

The main driver of insecurity is the collapse of already fragile institutions and social pacts after the 2011 revolution and, more importantly, the inequitable distribution of economic resources.
The outbreak of fighting among Arab, Tabu, and Tuareg tribes across the south can be largely attributed to competition for fixed economic streams derived from smuggling routes and access to oil fields.
Interference by northern political actors is a further irritant: the payment and arming of young men from the south by warring factions aligned with loose coalitions has prolonged and intensified local conflicts.
Extremism remains a challenge in the south but should not be overblown. Terrorist groups such as al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb and the so-called Islamic State have not found strong purchase in southern towns but have exploited the lack of southern governance for logistics and training.
http://carnegieendowment.org/2017/0...rnance-challenges-in-southern-libya-pub-68451

600-01345604em-Tuareg-Person-with-Camels-Erg-Ubari-Libya.jpg

Tuareg Person with Camels
 
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