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WAR REPORT
UN puts Libya request for weapons on hold
by Staff Writers
United Nations, United States (AFP) March 9, 2015


Tunisia seizes arms haul near border with Libya
Tunis (AFP) March 9, 2015 - Tunisian security forces on Monday uncovered a second arms cache in three days near the border with Libya, the interior ministry said.

"As part of ongoing operations against terrorist cells and their members... (security forces) have discovered a new weapons cache 15 kilometres (nine miles) from Ben Guerdane" in the southeast, it said.

The cache included 20 rocket-propelled grenade launchers and various types of rockets, 40 anti-tank mines, detonators, grenades and 23,000 rounds of assault rifle ammunition.

A similar find was made in the same area on Friday.

The Libyan border is a hotbed of trafficking of all kinds, including of fuel, manufactured goods and foodstuffs.

The chaos that has engulfed Libya since the 2011 conflict that led to the fall and death of Moamer Kadhafi also resulted in increased weapons smuggling along its porous border with Tunisia and Algeria.

Fighting inside Libya between rival militias and the emergence there of the Islamic State group this year has also caused fears in Tunis of a cross-border spillover.

Tunisia itself has also seen a rise of armed Islamist groups, with 60 soldiers and police killed in attacks or clashes attributed to jihadists since 2011.

Libya's request for UN approval to buy fighter jets, tanks and other weaponry to fight Islamic State militants has been put on hold at the request of seven Security Council members led by Spain, diplomats said Monday.

Libya had asked a Security Council committee for an exemption to an arms embargo to make the purchases from defense contractors in the Czech Republic, Serbia and Ukraine.

Spain asked that the request be put on hold as UN envoy Bernardino Leon held talks on forming a unity government that could spearhead the battle against the IS jihadists, diplomats said.

His request was supported by Britain, France, Chile, Lithuania, New Zealand and the United States in line with demands that reaching a power-sharing agreement be given priority.

Libya had asked UN approval for deliveries of eight helicopters, six fighter jets, four fighter-bombers, 150 tanks, 150 personnel carriers mounted with machine guns, 10,000 automatic grenade launchers, 1,000 sniper rifles along with ammunition and mortar shells.

Libya's Ambassador Ibrahim Dabbashi told the council that the weaponry would help the internationally-recognized government protect oil fields and monitor borders.

The request came less than two weeks after Libya asked the council to fully lift the arms embargo imposed in 2011 when the country descended into violence after the uprising against Moamer Kadhafi.

Diplomats told AFP that the request for the arms shipments was put on hold, but that no date was set for a decision at a later time.

A UN panel of experts wrote to the Security Council last week to express concern that arms shipments to Libya could fall into the wrong hands.

In a letter seen by AFP, they warned of "transfers of materiel -- particularly tanks, small arms, light weapons and related ammunition -- to non-state actors directly by the official end-users to militias supporting them or indirectly following fighting and loss of control over stockpiles."

Libya is awash in weapons and considered a major arms trafficking hub for North Africa, as powerful militias battle for control of key cities and the country's oil riches.

Members of Libya's rival parliament are due to meet in Morocco on Wednesday for a fresh round of UN-brokered talks while a dozen political leaders are to hold negotiations in Algeria on Tuesday.

At a meeting of its foreign ministers, the Cairo-based Arab League urged the UN Security Council to "lift the arms embargo on the Libyan government."

It also called on the international community to "stop the flow of weapons and armor through air and sea from reaching the terrorist groups and organizations."

The League vowed to offer full political and financial support to Libya's legitimate government.

The League will "supply the government with the required aid to allow it to protect the country's sovereignty, including its army... to be able to continue its mission to eradicate terrorism," a statement said.


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