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Early morning yesterday, air and missile strikes by the Western coalition tore up a Libyan Army armored column that had advanced rapidly overnight from the nearby city of Ajdabiya towards Benghazi, leaving behind a charnel field of blown-out tanks, missile launchers, and other military vehicles along the highway leading west. At one spot, where residents of Benghazi had begun, by mid-afternoon, to drive out in their cars to rubberneck at the destruction, youths clambered in and out of a half-dozen smoking tanks and examined the charred and dismembered remains of a number of soldiers. These men had come to attack us, fellow Libyans. They pointed to some apples and oranges and a squashed packet of processed cheese, and some cigarettes. They were angry over these comforts. There was a huge pile of wooden military crates for Grad surface-to-air missiles, and the remains of a sheep. A man called out, incensed: the attackers had stolen the sheep from local farmers, and had not even killed it in the time-honored Muslim fashion, by slitting its throat and bleeding it. They had, instead, shot it in the head. Until now, Libyans in Benghazi have been insistent that theirs is not a civil war, but a struggle by a majority of Libyans against a ruthless, mad despot and a hireling army—of Libyans, yes, who they often describe as thugs, and poor soldiers from the deep South, and also mercenaries from other countries. Slide show: Our coverage of the protests in Libya. Save this story Save this story. War Comes to Beirut. The conflict between Israel and Hezbollah has erupted, displacing more than a million people. Many in Lebanon fear a Gaza-like campaign of violence. By Rania Abouzeid. The Weekend Essay. In and around Kyiv, war has become part of daily life, even as the public grows weary of its costs. By Keith Gessen. The daily stream of racism and mendacity has had a numbing effect. But the question of what Trump might actually do is a prospect that voters cannot afford to ignore. By Jonathan Blitzer. Cowboy-Dance Future World. By Jack Handey. The New Yorker Interview. By Joshua Yaffa. Don Luigi Ciotti leads an anti-Mafia organization, and for decades he has run a secret operation that liberates women from the criminal underworld. The Pain of Travelling While Palestinian. This year, I learned the difference between a traveller and a refugee. By Mosab Abu Toha. Annals of Psychology. By Eren Orbey. A Reporter at Large. Four daughters in the royal family were kept drugged and imprisoned for almost two decades. A physician who tried to free them speaks out for the first time. By Heidi Blake. The Political Scene. Among the Gaza Protest Voters. Will their tactics persuade her, or risk throwing the election to Trump? By Andrew Marantz. Bon Iver Is Searching for the Truth. By Amanda Petrusich. News Desk. The Pursuit of Gender Justice. For the first time, the International Criminal Court has concluded that an armed group specifically targeted women. By Jina Moore Ngarambe.

Socio-Political Situation in Libya from the Urban Perspective

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Feras Kilani meets the forces trying to rid Sirte of so-called Islamic State. Militants of so-called Islamic State IS are on the verge of being ousted completely from their stronghold in Libya's central coastal city of Sirte. The battle to expel the jihadists has achieved more success recently with the help of US air strikes. It has damaged the jihadists, but does not spell the end for their presence in the country. Losing Sirte is a blow to the group's image. In its propaganda, IS had repeatedly portrayed the city, close to western Europe, as a key position outside of its main areas of operation in Iraq and Syria. IS turned key buildings in Sirte into its own institutions and prisons, and used the local radio station to air its propaganda. The city, which was the birthplace of former leader Muammar Gaddafi, also brought IS close to Libya's oil-rich area. Its militants have long been fighting other forces in pockets of Libya's second city, Benghazi, and have recently launched several attacks on its western outskirts. IS took complete control of Sirte in June after it was pushed out of its initial stronghold of Derna in Libya's far east by rival militias aligned with al-Qaeda. There are no reliable figures about the number of IS militants in Libya but it is estimated that the group has about 5, fighters in the country, many of who were thought to have been deployed in Sirte. Caught on the back foot, the group may initially dissolve into desert areas and revert to earlier tactics. Before it lost Derna, the group made its presence felt elsewhere in Libya by carrying out repeated bombings in the key cities of Tripoli and Benghazi, as well as of oil installations partly run by Western companies. And now, putting up resistance as it loses the battle in Sirte, IS has again been employing suicide bombings as a means of attack. Some believe IS fighters might flee to remote areas in the south. If they choose this route, they could head for the Sahel-Sahara area, where other jihadists are present and operate relatively freely. Libya's importance to IS means that the militants may eventually regroup and emerge in another part of the country, seeking to take land that they can then showcase as a major gain. Bani Walid, another former Gaddafi bastion, is one option for IS fighters. Local media recently indicated that air strikes hit a road in the city's south-east, which reports said were 'often used' by IS fighters. The militants may seek to boost their forces in and around Benghazi. Or they may head towards Sabratha in the west, where they used to run a large training camp. This site might not hold much appeal, however, as it was the target of a US air strike in February. Another option is Ajdabiya, which lies between Sirte and Benghazi, where they previously had a presence. There, however, they would have to confront al-Qaeda-linked rivals and the Libyan National Army of the Tobruk-based parliament. But while the group might want to seize territory, it may struggle achieve this in the face of mounting pressure and US air strikes. BBC Monitoring , external reports and analyses news from TV, radio, web and print media around the world. Flushing out IS fighters in Libya's Sirte. This video can not be played To play this video you need to enable JavaScript in your browser. By BBC Monitoring. Why is losing Sirte significant? Does IS have any other strongholds in Libya? No, but it is still present elsewhere in the country. Image source, Reuters. How many IS militants are there in Libya? What might IS do now? Where might they go next? More on this story.

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What next for Islamic State in Libya after Sirte?

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