UPDATE 2 - Clashes break out as rival governments jostle for power in Libya's capital

UPDATE 2 - Clashes break out as rival governments jostle for power in Libya's capital

Fighting between armed groups erupted after Fathi Bashagha reached Tripoli to take control from Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh

UPDATES WITH UN CALL FOR RESTRAINT


By Ali Abo Rezeg and Walid Abdullah


ANKARA / TRIPOLI, Libya (AA) – Clashes erupted in Libya’s capital Tripoli on Tuesday between armed groups loyal to Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh and rival leader Fathi Bashagha, who was recently appointed as premier by the Tobruk-based parliament.


Bashagha reached the capital overnight to take control of the government from Dbeibeh, who has refused to hand over power.


However, a security source told Anadolu Agency that Bashagha was forced to leave the capital after fierce clashes were reported between the two sides.


Fighting has been reported in the al-Mansoura and Souq al-Thulatha areas in central Tripoli.


Khaled al-Mishri, the head of Libya’s High Council of State, condemned the violence and called for an immediate cessation of hostilities.


UN Secretary-General's Special Adviser on Libya Stephanie Williams, for her part, called for immediate calm and restraint.


"I urge restraint and insist on the absolute necessity of refraining from provocative actions, including inflammatory rhetoric, participation in clashes and the mobilization of forces," she tweeted.


Williams went on to assert that dialogue is the only exit to the ongoing crisis.


"Conflict cannot be solved with violence, but with dialogue and mediation, and to this end, the good offices of the United Nations remain available to all parties who believe in helping Libya find a genuine, consensual way forward towards stability and elections," she said.


For more than two months, there have been two governments in Libya: the national unity government led by Dbeibeh and the one granted confidence in early March by the Tobruk-based House of Representatives.


Dbeibeh has previously said he would only cede authority to a government that comes through an “elected parliament,” raising fears that the oil-rich country could slip back into a civil war.

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