(Reuters) - A
Libyan warplane from forces loyal to the internationally recognized
government bombed a Greek-operated oil tanker anchored off the coast,
killing two crewmen in an escalation of hostilities between factions
vying to rule the country. Military officials
said the vessel had acted suspiciously after a warning not to enter port
and said it was suspected of transporting Islamist militants to Derna,
the eastern port city where the ship was at anchor when it was hit on
Sunday. State oil firm NOC
said it had leased the ship to carry fuel for power generation to Derna
from Brega, an oil port to the west. The vessel was damaged, but none
of the 12,600 tonnes of heavy oil leaked out, the Athens-based operator
Aegean Shipping Enterprises Co. said. Greece
condemned the "unprovoked and cowardly" attack that killed one Greek and
one Romanian crew member and wounded two others and said it had
contacted the U.N. envoy for Libya and the European Union about the incident. "The
Greek government will take all the necessary actions towards Libyan
authorities, despite the unrest, so that light is shed on the tragic
incident, the attackers identified and punished and the families of the
victims reimbursed," it said. The strike on the Liberian-flagged vessel ARAEVO was part of increasingly chaotic violence in Libya
which has two parallel governments: the officially recognized one, which
has been pushed out of the capital, and the administration run by a
faction known as Libya Dawn that seized Tripoli last summer. Each side has appointed its own officials to run NOC and the oil ministry, leading to confusion over who controls what. After
a special meeting of the Arab League in Cairo, the head of Libya's
elected parliament called on Arab states to intervene to protect the
country's oil installations. Fighting
for control of oil assets has slashed Libya's oil output to 380,000
barrels per day from the 1.6 million bpd produced before a civil war
ousting of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. The
NOC office in Tripoli, where the rival government is now in control,
said it had informed authorities of the vessel's plans. It said the
incident would impact "negatively" on incoming tankers to Libya's ports But
Ahmed Bu Zayad Al-Mismari, a spokesman for the internationally
recognized government's general chief of staff, said: "The NOC in
Tripoli did not inform us...The tanker may have been involved with
terrorists or it may have been taken over at sea by terrorists so that
is why we bombed it." Since
the war that ended Gaddafi's four-decade rule, rival nationalist,
Islamist, tribal and regionalist forces have battled for power. But the
conflict has coalesced around two loosely aligned factions. The
government and elected parliament which have been pushed out of Tripoli
to Tobruk, an eastern port town some 150 km (100 miles) from the
Egyptian border, has allied itself with ex-rebel forces in Zintan, near
Tripoli, and a former Gaddafi army general, Khalifa Haftar, who is
conducting a campaign against Islamists. Tripoli
is now controlled by a self-declared government set up by forces allied
to the city of Misrata, reinstating a former parliament and taking over
ministries.
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