Libya militia 'launches air raids' against ISIL
A militia alliance that controls Libya's capital has carried out air strikes against positions of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) jihadist group in the coastal city of Sirte, an official said.
"A Fajr Libya warplane launched several raids on April 23 evening against sites where there were members of the Libyan branch of the ISIL," an official in the town, who did not want to be named, told AFP.
The targets included an ISIL command base set up in a conference centre where the late leader Moamer Kadhafi once hosted international summits in what was his hometown, the official said.
Fajr Libya is a coalition of militias, including Islamists, which controls Tripoli, where it has installed a government and a parliament opposed to the internationally recognised legislature and cabinet.
Heavy fighting has raged between ISIL and a Fajr Libya battalion in Sirte, located 450 kilometres (280 miles) east of the capital, since April 22 evening, according to a spokesman for the militia.
There have been sporadic clashes for about two months between ISIL and the battalion, tasked by the Tripoli parliament with restoring security in the coastal city.
The internationally recognised government fled to the far east of the country after Fajr Libya seized the capital in August.
The turmoil has allowed ISIL to gain a foothold in the oil-rich North African state, where the extremist group has executed dozens of Christians.
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