Date: Jun 22, 2018
Source: The Daily Star
 
East Libyan forces advance to retake oil ports, clashes continue
Reuters
BENGHAZI, Libya/ VIENNA: East Libyan forces said Thursday they had retaken the shuttered oil ports of Es Sider and Ras Lanuf, though clashes resumed south of Ras Lanuf in the afternoon after a counter-attack by rival factions.

Staff were evacuated from terminals in Libya’s eastern oil crescent and exports were suspended last Thursday when armed opponents of eastern-based military commander Khalifa Haftar stormed the ports and occupied them.

The closure has led to production losses of up to 450,000 barrels per day and two oil storage tanks were destroyed or badly damaged by fires during the fighting.

For the past week, Haftar’s Libyan National Army has pounded the area with airstrikes as it mobilized to retake the ports, and it continued to target its rivals with air strikes Thursday as they retreated.

Haftar is one of the figures vying for power in Libya since the country fragmented following a NATO-backed uprising in 2011. He has received increased international recognition since seizing the oil crescent ports in 2016 and allowing the National Oil Corp. to reopen them, despite his rejection of a U.N.-backed government in the capital Tripoli.

Ahmad al-Mismari, a spokesman for the LNA which Haftar built up during his three-year campaign to seize the eastern city of Benghazi, said troops had retaken Es Sider by mid-morning and were clashing with opponents as they advanced west.

He said Ras Lanuf, which includes a residential town, an airstrip, storage tanks and a refinery, alongside the oil terminal, had also been taken by the LNA, as rivals had fled to the west and south into the desert, suffering heavy losses.

But military and local sources said clashes had later resumed south of Ras Lanuf when the LNA’s opponents counter-attacked. Medical and military sources confirmed 10 dead and 13 wounded among LNA forces.

An oil engineer said a third oil storage tank may have been hit after photos published on social media showed thick black smoke rising from the area, though officials were still trying to confirm the source of the fire.

Libya’s national production has been cut to between 600,000 and 700,000 bpd from more than one million bpd during the oil crescent clashes, but NOC Chairman Mustafa Sanalla said he was expecting a quick restart.

Production at AGOCO, an NOC subsidiary based in the east, has fallen from around 250,000 to 180,000 bpd, an oil official said Thursday, due to power problems and to disruption at Ras Lanuf.

“Libyan production is very low but we are going to resume very soon,” he said in Vienna. “After a couple of days we will resume, we start our operations hopefully.”

The NOC has blamed the attack on the terminals on militias led by Ibrahim Jathran, who blockaded oil crescent ports for several years before losing control of them in 2016.

The LNA has said the Benghazi Defense Brigades – a coalition of anti-Haftar fighters that previously tried to advance on Benghazi and seized Ras Lanuf and Es Sider for 10 days in March 2017 – were also involved. Both sides have drawn on mercenaries recruited from southern Libya, Chad and Sudan.

Jathran, who is from the oil crescent region, said he attacked the ports last week to “overturn injustice” against local residents by the LNA. The LNA was accused of abuses and mass arrests after using tribal alliances to win the ports.

Haftar is the dominant figure in eastern Libya, aligned with a government and parliament based there since 2014. Backed by regional allies including Egypt and the United Arab Emirates, he has controlled Benghazi, northeast of the oil crescent, since late last year.