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Libyan authorities say ‘coup’ bid in restive Benghazi

By AFP - May 17,2014 - Last updated at May 17,2014

TRIPOLI — Libya’s interim authorities on Saturday denounced an offensive launched by a rogue general in the restive eastern city of Benghazi against Islamists as a “coup” bid, a statement said.

The offensive by Khalifa Haftar against those he describes as “terrorists” is considered “an action outside state legitimacy and a coup d’etat”, the army, government and parliament said in a joint statement.

“All those who took part in this coup bid will be prosecuted,” said Nuri Abu Sahmein, the head of the General National Congress, interim parliament, reading from the joint statement on state television.

Interim Prime Minister Abdullah Al Thani, who has branded Haftar’s forces as “outlaws”, and Armed Forces Chief-of-Staff Abdessalam Jadallah Al Salihin, who has denied any army involvement in the Benghazi clashes, were shown on television standing next to Sahmein.

Khalifa, a retired general, used air power to pound Islamist positions in Benghazi on Friday, in a campaign to purge Libya’s second city of “terrorists” that led to clashes in which 37 people were killed.

Haftar, who defected from the army of Muammar Qadhafi in the late 1980s, led ground forces in the NATO-backed 2011 uprising that toppled and killed the veteran dictator.

He now heads a group calling itself the “National Army”, which launched Friday’s operation to flush “terrorists” out of Benghazi, according to his spokesman Mohammed Al Hijazi.

The army says that he is being supported by tribes, officers who defected from the army as well ex-rebels who are opposed to the central government.

Earlier this year Haftar announced, in a video posted on the Internet, an “initiative” under which the interim government and parliament would be suspended.

That video sparked rumours on social media that a coup might be in the offing.

But the government, which has come in for criticism for failing to defeat lawlessness in Libya, was quick to quash the rumours and insist it was in control.

Libya has been rocked by lawlessness since the 2011 uprising, and authorities have struggled to assert their control over the vast, mostly desert country, which is awash with heavy weapons and effectively ruled by a patchwork of former rebel militias.

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