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Libyan forces say they have captured Sirte university from Isis Libyan forces say they have captured Sirte ‘Isis base’
(35 minutes later)
Libyan forces battling to oust Islamic State from Sirte say they have captured its university complex but lost one of their warplanes over the city. Libyan forces battling to oust Islamic State from Sirte say they have made significant advances, gaining control of a large convention centre previously used as a base by the jihadi group.
Rida Issa, a spokesman for the forces, said on Wednesday it was not clear how the plane had crashed. Isis said it had shot down the jet, killing the pilot, according to a website close to the jihadi group. “Our forces have complete control of the whole of the Ouagadougou [convention] complex they even advanced some distance beyond the complex,” said Rida Issa, a spokesman in the forces’ media office. Fighters had also captured Sirte’s hospital and university complex, he said.
Forces aligned with Libya’s UN-backed government launched their campaign for Sirte in May. On 1 August, the United States began airstrikes to help them advance against militants encircled in the centre of the city. If the gains are confirmed, it would mark the biggest advance the forces have made for weeks. They come 10 days after the US began airstrikes over Sirte, which fighters say have aided their advance on militants encircled in the centre of the city.
US drones and fighter jets have carried out 29 strikes since then, targeting several Isis positions on Monday and a gun-mounted pickup truck on Tuesday, according to statements by US Africa Command. The capture of the Ouagadougou complex would also be an important symbolic victory. The large domed building is a landmark in Sirte, the home town of the late dictator Muammar Gaddafi, whose fall in an uprising in 2011 precipitated years of factional anarchy. The building was used for meetings and religious instruction by Isis after it took control of the city last year.
Libyan fighter jets have also been flying regular missions over Sirte, the home town of the late dictator Muammar Gaddafi, whose fall in an uprising in 2011 precipitated years of factional anarchy. Forces aligned with Libya’s UN-backed government launched their campaign for Sirte in May. Their advance slowed as they approached the centre of Sirte, and the forces, led by brigades from the city of Misrata, have suffered heavy casualties from Isis landmines and snipers.
Clashes have been sporadic, with heavier fighting interspersed with lulls that last for several days.
On Monday government-backed fighters reached a hotel complex south-east of the recently captured Dollar neighbourhood.
Related: US launches airstrikes against Isis in LibyaRelated: US launches airstrikes against Isis in Libya
Since 1 August, US drones and fighter jets have carried out 29 strikes since then, targeting several Isis positions on Monday and a gun-mounted pickup truck on Tuesday, according to statements by US Africa Command.
Libyan fighter jets have also been flying regular missions over Sirte.
The UN-backed government arrived in Tripoli in March but has struggled to impose its authority and faces continuing resistance from armed factions that control eastern Libya.The UN-backed government arrived in Tripoli in March but has struggled to impose its authority and faces continuing resistance from armed factions that control eastern Libya.
On the ground in Sirte, Libyan forces led by brigades from the city of Misrata have suffered heavy casualties from Isis mines and sniper fire. Clashes have been sporadic, with heavier fighting interspersed with lulls that last for several days. Libyan militants returning from combat in Syria’s civil war helped to implant Isis in Libya in 2014, but it has struggled to win support or hold territory as most local people regard it as a malign import dependent on foreign fighters.
“Our forces are making progress in their attack against Daesh [Islamic State], and have recaptured the University of Sirte,” Issa said. They had also advanced to a cluster of unfinished buildings used by Islamic State snipers just west of the centre of Sirte, he added.
On Monday government-backed fighters reached a hotel complex south-east of the recently captured Dollar neighbourhood.
Libyan militants returning from combat in Syria’s civil war helped to implant Islamic State in Libya in 2014, but Isis has struggled to win support or hold territory as most local people regard it as a malign import dependent on foreign fighters.