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>Gadhafi forces repel rebels

March 30, 2011 Leave a comment

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A sustained counterattack by Libyan government troops sent overmatched rebel fighters fleeing eastward for almost 100 miles Tuesday, erasing many of the weekend gains by opposition forces attempting to overthrow Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.
Panicked and badly rattled, hundreds of rebels sped away from the front to escape fierce rocket barrages by Gadhafi’s soldiers and militiamen. Rebel gun trucks raced three abreast and jostled madly for position on a coastal highway choked with retreating fighters and civilians. At one point, rebels surrendered 70 miles of terrain in just four hours.

It was a humiliating rout for a volunteer fighting force that had advanced 150 miles in 24 hours over the weekend behind allied airstrikes that pummeled government troops and armor. Many rebels had spoken confidently of marching on Tripoli, the capital, buoyed by false news reports Monday that their forces had captured Gadhafi’s hometown garrison of Sirte.

But by Tuesday afternoon, those same rebels were in headlong retreat from Bin Jawwad, which they had seized only Sunday. Many fled 25 miles east to Ras Lanuf, the oil city captured by the opposition Saturday. By nightfall, the city and its refinery were under government assault as the rebel retreat spilled farther east.
The swift battlefield reversal underscored the mercurial nature of the war in the east, where neither side seems strong enough to vanquish the other.
Nearly a month of fighting has raged back and forth across a 220-mile stretch of coastal wasteland in a nation with a coastline of nearly 1,100 miles.
The headlong retreat from Bin Jawwad marked the second time in just 23 days that government forces had routed rebels there. The town is on the fault line between eastern and western Libya, with several tribes in the area split between the two sides.
By nightfall Tuesday, some rebel gun trucks had retreated all way east to Uqaylah, 45 miles from Ras Lanuf — and nearly 120 miles from the spot where rebels had advanced to within 50 miles of Sirte 24 hours earlier.
Among those fleeing were rebels driving trucks mounted with the opposition’s most effective weapons: 106mm artillery, heavy machine guns and recoilless rifles. Rebels firing behind sand dunes shouted at them to turn around, but they ignored them and sped east.
Some fighters acknowledged that they felt helpless against the BM-21 Grad rocket systems that pounded rebel positions throughout the day. There was no sign near Bin Jawwad of Grad batteries that rebels seized from government forces last weekend.
“When the Grads hit, we all ran,” said Abdelsalam Ali, 37, a taxi driver armed with an assault rifle. “They’re too strong for us.”
Asked if he would stand his ground and fight if the government advance continued, Ali shrugged and replied, “It’s not wise to face these guys when they have heavy weapons and we don’t. I’m trying to do this in a safe way.”
Also fleeing was Mohammed Fatallah, 42, a businessman armed with a submachine gun manufactured in 1949. He said he also was leery of Grad rockets to stand and fight for Bin Jawwad.
“If the planes will hit Gadhafi’s men, well, then I’ll go there and fight,” Fatallah said. “If the planes don’t attack, we’ll get pushed back even more.”
Other lightly armed rebels said they retreated because they were told that only heavy machine guns and antiaircraft systems were needed at the front. But those claims proved suspect when rebel gun trucks fled from the front towing those very weapons.
Many rebels gave up any pretense, at least for the day, of marching on Sirte or on to Tripoli.
Gadhafi’s forces have built well-defended fortifications about 50 miles east of Sirte, which has been attacked by the Western-led alliance. But even after airstrikes routed Gadhafi’s men from eastern Libyan cities, government troops are still better armed and better led than the rebels.
The defense of Sirte is important to Gadhafi because it is the last major pro-Gadhafi redoubt between the current front and Tripoli, 275 miles west. The city is dominated by well-armed members of Gadhafi’s Gadhadhfa tribe.
More than 100 miles east of Sirte, gas shortages hobbled some rebel forces. Many rebel vehicles carry extra containers of gasoline. But some rebels, joined by civilians, crowded into gas stations closed for lack of electricity. Using rope, they lowered empty water bottles weighted with stones into underground storage tanks to scoop up gasoline.
Later, rebels set fire to an abandoned armored troop carrier and a cement truck as they retreated, apparently to keep them out of government hands.
The day began with a fierce government assault early Tuesday, the second in as many days. Rebels at first retreated to new lines a few miles east of a desert crossroads. There, they watched government rockets crash down two miles away, sending up plumes of dirty brown smoke.
The dull thump of artillery and heavy machine-gun fire sounded in and around Bin Jawwad at mid-day as rebels fought desperately to hold positions there.
Plumes of black smoke rose over the grimy coastal town as volleys of rocket and artillery fire echoed across the desert. Ambulances with blaring sirens sped west, their paramedics frantically treating wounded fighters.
At 2:30 p.m., a furious government fusillade stirred panic among rebel volunteers and defecting army regulars fighting alongside them. About 200 fighters suddenly abandoned their positions east of Bin Jawwad in a mad dash to safety.
Two larger, more chaotic retreats erupted an hour later as hundreds of rebels fled another 25 miles eastward. Some fired their weapons into the air at random. They were cursed by other fleeing fighters for wasting precious ammunition.
A few fighters shouted “Allahu Akbar!” — God is great — over their shoulders with little conviction as they abandoned the fight.
Those same rebels earlier had boldly proclaimed their intent to not only hold their ground but also mount an assault on Sirte. Bernwi, the exterminator-turned-fighter, vowed to march to Tripoli “to exterminate the biggest rat — Gadhafi.”
Just two hours later, a stiff desert wind blew in the faces of terrified fighters speeding east, and Bin Jawwad was abandoned to Gadhafi’s men.
The government counterattack began overnight with rocket barrages that scattered poorly organized rebel positions west of Bin Jawwad. By early morning Tuesday, dozens of rebels sped east into Bin Jawwad, fleeing gunfire and explosions.
Furious arguments broke out over the proper way to hold off the government assault. With no formal leadership and no coordinated tactics, the rebels are not a unified fighting force but a collection of enthusiastic but untrained men with guns.
Some fighters set up truck-mounted 106mm artillery tubes atop sand dunes and fired at advancing government forces. Others turned their gun trucks around and drove cautiously toward the fight, only to suddenly turn and flee again at the sound of enemy fire.
Still other fighters crouched behind sand dunes and embankments along the Mediterranean coast, armed only with assault rifles and rocket-propelled grenade launchers. Some squinted helplessly through binoculars at Grad rockets exploding along the highway a mile west.
Rebels said they were lured by Gadhafi gunmen into an ambush late Monday about 50 miles east of Sirte. Bernwi and other gunmen said a group of government militiamen raised a white flag to draw the rebels close, then opened fire with heavy machine guns.
As the rebels retreated toward Bin Jawwad, they passed several groups of rebel fighters lounging on sand dunes and feasting on meals provided by rebel supporters.
The men were implored to stand and fight, retreating rebels said. But these fighters, too, turned their gun trucks around and sped east toward the rapidly collapsing rebel lines.

>Libyan rebels say Ras Lanuf under heavy bombardment

March 10, 2011 Leave a comment

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The rebel leadership said on Thursday that the oil port of Ras Lanuf in eastern Libya is under heavy bombardment.
Asked about a Libyan state television report that government forces had cleared Ras Lanuf of “armed gangs”, Hafiz Ghoga, spokesman for the National Libyan Council, said: “No, this is not accurate.”

>Gadhafi Says Foreign Elements Responsible for Libya Uprising

March 9, 2011 Leave a comment

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Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi is repeating his claim that foreign operatives are responsible for the uprising against his government.
Addressing a group of people from the town of Zentan, Gadhafi blamed outside elements from Afghanistan, Algeria, Egypt and the Palestinian territories for the rebellion. The remarks were broadcast on state television Wednesday.
Troops loyal to Gadhafi attacked the rebel-held city of Zawiya for a fifth day Tuesday, part of renewed assaults aimed at reclaiming ground lost to rebel forces. Eyewitnesses said the city, 50 kilometers west of the capital, came under heavy mortar fire.
Rebel officials in the city said dozens of people have been killed in the assault and hundreds wounded, including women and children.
The various reports could not be independently confirmed because electricity, phone and Internet services in Zawiya have all been cut.
To the east, much of which is under opposition control, Libyan warplanes carried out several airstrikes on anti-government positions around the key oil port of Ras Lanuf. The city was bombed heavily as pro-Gadhafi forces targeted the town’s water reservoir among other installations. But as of late Tuesday, rebel officials said they still controlled the area.
Anti-government forces are seeking to recapture the city of Bin Jawad, 160 kilometers east of Gadhafi’s hometown of Sirte, after pulling out in the face of reinforced government troops.
Opposition leaders based in the eastern city of Benghazi initially suggested they made an amnesty offer to Gadhafi, but later denied any back-channel negotiations were under way. A spokesman for the rebel National Libyan Council, Abdul Hafidh Ghoga, said the group is not prepared to negotiate.
Ghoga called again for foreign powers to impose a no-fly zone over Libya and effectively ground Gadhafi’s air force.
Rebel representatives said they have had contacts with some foreign governments, and have sent envoys to several European cities seeking support. An Italian diplomatic delegation was in Benghazi Tuesday meeting with opposition leaders. It was the first official public visit by Western diplomats since the establishment of the provisional rebel government.
But activists say the Benghazi council’s authority remains tentative and has yet to unite with disparate, divided opposition groups abroad.
A council official told European officials Monday that Gadhafi is relying on his air force because he lacks adequate ground troops to put down the uprising. Mahmoud Jebril said the Libyan leader relies largely on security brigades led by his sons and loyal officers.

>Gaddafi forces attack rebels anew, even as regime appears to seek talks

March 8, 2011 Leave a comment

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Government and rebel forces engaged in a fierce battle Monday for control of this oil depot on the Mediterranean coast, as regime loyalists mounted assaults on several fronts to reclaim ground lost since the Feb. 17 uprising began.
In a second day of heavy fighting for control of Ras Lanuf, the site of a major oil refinery east of Tripoli, loyalists bombarded the town with airstrikes. To the west, the besieged rebel-held city of Zawiyah faced a fourth straight day of lethal assault.
But with neither side able to muster overwhelming force, the result appeared to be a bloody stalemate, with the death tolls rising in both east and west from the burgeoning civil war over Moammar Gaddafi’s 41-year-long rule.
“Yesterday, we were so optimistic,” said Najla el-Mangoush, a law professor who works with the opposition’s governing council in the eastern city of Benghazi. “Now I’m worried about what’s happening.” He said that Gaddafi “has used every dirty trick on us.”
In an apparent government overture, a former Libyan prime minister appeared on state television to make what was called a direct appeal to the leaders of the opposition in Benghazi, the rebels’ provisional capital.
“Give a chance to national dialogue to resolve this crisis, to help stop the bloodshed, and not give a chance to foreigners to come and capture our country again,” said Jadallah Azous al-Talhi, who was prime minister in the 1980s.
The opposition, however, dismissed the notion of peace talks. “They’ve been asking for contact, but the council has refused,” said Jalal el-Gallal, a spokesman with the opposition in Benghazi, referring to the revolutionaries’ governing committee. Mohamed Fanoush, a member of the Benghazi city council who is allied with the opposition, also said overtures from Gaddafi’s regime had been rejected out of hand. “The answer was: ‘There will be no negotiations as long as you are killing Libyans,’ ” Fanoush said.
In the western city of Zawiyah, a rebel spokesman speaking by satellite phone said Gaddafi’s troops had rolled into the city with tanks for a fourth day Monday. Phone, electricity and Internet services had been cut. “They demolished the mosque, came into the square, but after seven hours, we beat them back,” said the spokesman, Mohamed Magid.
He said that at least 10 rebels were killed and more than 30 wounded in what he described as fierce urban warfare. “For a fourth day, they have come, and for a fourth day, we have beat them back. But they are still on the east, west and south of the city, and they are going to return. . . . We are low on supplies, medicines. We need support. We need help.”
Another rebel-held city, Misurata, which is Libya’s third largest, appeared quiet most of Monday, after weathering a major assault by government troops Sunday. A rebel spokesman at a Misurata hospital, Abed el-Salam Bayo, said 21 opposition fighters and civilians were killed along with 19 government troops. As night fell Monday, door-to-door alerts warned residents that loyalist tanks were again approaching.
“We still fear another attack, so everyone is preparing molotov cocktails that we are making from Pepsi-Cola bottles,” said Salah Abed El-Aziz, a 60-year-old architect in Misurata. “The morale in the city is very high. It was a beautiful battle; the price was high. But this is the price we have to pay for our freedom.”
In Ras Lanuf, which was seized by rebels Friday, the government launched a morning air attack. At least one bomb fell inside the grounds of an ethylene refinery, where chemical storage tanks posed a major risk of explosion. Although the Libyan jets dropped bombs in the area throughout the day, Gallal said that there had been no ground fighting and that rebels maintained control of the city.
“Ras Lanuf is definitely in the hands of the rebels,” Gallal said. “But the other guys are well dug in.” At least for now, the government appears to have succeeded in holding off what the rebels hoped would be a push westward to Sirte, a government stronghold halfway between Benghazi and Tripoli that is Gaddafi’s home town.
Gaddafi made an appearance on state television Monday that was inexplicably cut short. He got more time in during an interview with a French television network, during which he said Libya was an important partner of the West and attempted to paint the rebels as al-Qaeda operatives.
Nearly 200,000 people have fled Libya since the fighting began, according to the United Nations, which said Monday that it expects the number to double over the next three months. In all, as many as 1 million Libyans and migrant workers will require assistance, the United Nations said in issuing an appeal for $160 million to cover the costs.
A summary of the appeal said that although “the clearest humanitarian needs” stem from the outflow of people fleeing the crisis, “there are likely to be many more migrants within Libya who want to leave” but have been unable to do so.
U.N. officials cautioned that the estimate is preliminary and that they do not have a complete picture of the extent of need in Libya, particularly in government-controlled Tripoli and the conflict zone in the west. Over the weekend, Libyan Foreign Minister Musa Kusa acceded to a request by U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to send an assessment team to Tripoli to determine the extend of Libya’s humanitarian needs. But as of Monday, the U.N. team had not been given the visas and guarantees of unhindered access it needs to carry out its work.
Ban has named Abdul-Illah Khatib, a former Jordanian foreign minister, as a special U.N. envoy to Libya. Khatib has been directed to consult with Libyan authorities and others in the region “on the immediate humanitarian situation as well as the wider dimensions of the crisis.”

>Libya: UN appoints envoy and agrees humanitarian visit

March 7, 2011 Leave a comment

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The UN has appointed a new envoy on Libya and is to send a humanitarian team as the battle between forces loyal to Col Gaddafi and rebels intensifies.
UN chief Ban Ki-moon named a former Jordanian minister to deal with Libya and said Col Gaddafi had agreed to allow an assessment team into Tripoli.
The UN’s top humanitarian official also demanded urgent access to the town of Misrata after fierce fighting there.
 Rebels have been trying to fight off a counter-offensive by Gaddafi forces.
Col Gaddafi’s forces have been attacking both near Tripoli and in the east after recent rebel gains.
‘Hospital bombed’
A statement from Mr Ban’s office said the UN secretary general “notes that civilians are bearing the brunt of the violence, and calls for an immediate halt to the government’s disproportionate use of force and indiscriminate attacks on civilian targets”.
The statement continued: “He stresses that those who violate international humanitarian law or commit grave crimes must be held accountable.”
Mr Ban has appointed Jordan’s former foreign minister, Abdelilah Al-Khatib, as his special envoy “to undertake urgent consultations with the authorities in Tripoli and in the region on the immediate humanitarian situation,” the statement said.
Mr Ban also said Libyan Foreign Minister Musa Kusa had agreed to accept the immediate dispatch of a humanitarian assessment team to the capital.
UN relief co-ordinator Valerie Amos said that after heavy fighting in Misrata, 200km (125 miles) east of Tripoli, “people are injured and dying and need help immediately”.
Government troops with tanks and artillery fought their way into rebel-held Misrata on Saturday before being forced back.
“I call on the authorities to provide access without delay to allow aid workers to help save lives,” Baroness Amos said.
A local doctor told the BBC that 21 dead and more than 100 wounded had arrived at his hospital, which he said was also targeted by government troops.
He said the fighting went on for at least six hours.
“They bombed all the houses with heavy weapons. They intentionally gunned and exploded our drug store. They bombed even around our hospital but fortunately nobody was injured. More than five mosques which I know are bombed.”
A resident of Misrata, Mohamed Benrasali, told the BBC there were joyous scenes there as the Gaddafi forces were turned back.
He said one government tank had been blown up and 16 Gaddafi soldiers killed. Other soldiers had been captured and would be interrogated on Monday.
With a population of 300,000, Misrata is the largest town controlled by rebels outside their stronghold in the eastern part of the country.
Residents have called for the international community to establish a no-fly zone over Libya to prevent Col Gaddafi’s air force from attacking.
In the US, ex-ambassador to the UN Bill Richardson and ex-national security adviser Stephen Hadley were among those advocating the supply of arms to rebels.
‘Bigger attack’
Rebels in Zawiya, 50km west of Tripoli, also said they repulsed an attack by government forces on Sunday.
“There was a new attack, bigger than yesterday,” rebel spokesman Youssef Shagan told Reuters.
“There were one-and-a-half hours of fighting… Two people were killed from our side and many more injured. We are still in full control of the square.”
The anti-government forces are centred in the eastern city of Benghazi. The rebels have set up a Transitional National Council that has called on the international community to recognise it as Libya’s sole government.
On Sunday troops backed by helicopter gunships had attacked the major oil town of Ras Lanuf which was taken by rebel forces on Saturday. It is 160km east of Col Gaddafi’s well-defended hometown of Sirte.
Rebels said their forces withdrew from Bin Jawad – about 50km north-west of Ras Lanuf – after coming under attack when they advanced.
The UN estimates that more than 1,000 people have died in nearly three weeks of unrest in Libya, which follows public protests in neighbouring Tunisia and Egypt that saw their longtime authoritarian leaders overthrown.
An estimated 200,000 people – mostly foreign workers – have fled the country, creating a humanitarian crisis along Libya’s border with Tunisia.
The UN Security Council approved sanctions last week imposing asset freezes and travel bans on Col Gaddafi and his family and aides.
The resolution also referred Col Gaddafi and his inner circle to the International Criminal Court for investigation of crimes against humanity.

>Gunfire rings out in Libyan capital

March 6, 2011 Leave a comment

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Heavy, sustained gunfire rang out in the Libyan capital of Tripoli on Sunday, but confusion reigned as to what prompted the shooting.
A government official said the shots were celebratory — marking the army’s victory in the city of Zawiya and its presence in the oil town of Ras Lanuf in eastern Libya.However, a witness in Tripoli said the gunfire was actually part of fighting — not celebration — in Green Square. On Sunday morning, Libyan state TV showed video of Gadhafi supporters in Green Square, with the caption “Green Square now.” The broadcast zoomed in on a clock to show the actual time and showed a person holding a sign that showed Sunday’s date.
The station said the people in the square were celebrating the army’s regain of control in not just Zawiya and Ras Lanuf but also the eastern port city of Tobruk.
“Morning victory, O people of Libya. Victory city of Tobruk from terrorist gangs,” the station said.
A day earlier, opposition forces had claimed major achievements in Zawiya and Ras Lanuf. And most of the eastern part of the country had been under rebel control for several days.
It was not immediately clear whether the government account of events was true. CNN has not been able to enter Zawiya and does not have independent confirmation of events in Ras Lanuf.
On Saturday, Libyan opposition leaders announced an alternative government as the United States and other countries helped evacuate refugees of the conflict.
Anti-government forces claimed two major successes Saturday: preventing pro-government forces from taking Zawiya, near the capital of Tripoli, and capturing Ras Lanuf.
The opposition and government forces have battled in recent days for full control of Zawiya, about 30 miles west of Tripoli.
Pro-Gadhafi forces withdrew from the city’s Martyrs’ Square and returned to their positions on the outskirts after intense clashes with rebels, according to a witness who is serving as a rebel spokesman.
He reported heavy gunfire and mortar shelling and saw the bodies of three slain opposition members carried in the square en route to burial.
The witness said pro-Gadhafi forces entered a residential area in the city and shot live ammunition and automatic weapons at residents in the streets. The sounds of automatic weapon fire and people yelling could be heard during a telephone interview with the witness.
After a lull in fighting, clashes erupted again Saturday evening.
The pro-Gadhafi security forces are using tanks, armed vehicles, and heavy weapons, and the anti-Gadhafi forces are well-armed, a second witness said. Many deaths and injuries have occurred in the latest round of fighting, and protesters managed to seize tanks and weapons from the security forces.
Emboldened opposition members prepared to advance west to Gadhafi’s birthplace of Sirte.
Government forces, however, worked to thwart their push. CNN reporters following the movement of rebels in As Sidr, just west of Ras Lanuf, saw an air force helicopter pound opposition positions. There was no word on casualties.
Rebels near Ras Lanuf said they shot down a Libyan air force plane, a Soviet-made Sukhoi Su-24MK that crashed in the desert. CNN located the plane’s debris, spread over a kilometer (about half a mile), with the headless bodies of two pilots at the site.
The plane was printed with the emblem of the Libyan Arab Air Force.
In the capital, a pro-democracy activist who spoke to CNN described a city filled with tension and mistrust. The woman, who asked not to be named because of fears for her safety, said she has seen people in the streets who, she believes, are monitoring residents’ comings and goings and phone conversations.
“I see cars that have people inside them, and they are usually connected with a computer,” the woman said, adding that special antennae are connected to the computers.
The same people are also interrupting cell phone signals and hacking mobiles, she said, and the internet has been unavailable since Thursday.
The family’s business has been robbed, with millions of dollars’ worth of materials stolen, she said. Squatters have also moved into one of the family’s homes.
“The police won’t do anything about it,” she told CNN. “Everyone is focusing on what is going on politically and losing focus on the crime.”
The woman said she has been trying to smuggle medication and other supplies into Libya, and that’s one reason she refuses to leave — even though so far, she said her efforts have been unsuccessful.
The strife engulfing the besieged north African nation is reverberating across the country, the region and the world. Death toll estimates range from more than 1,000 to as many as 2,000, and the international community has been pondering strategies on how to end the violence and remove the Gadhafi regime.
The government has been reviled across the globe for violence against civilians, and the International Criminal Court this week launched an investigation of Gadhafi, some of his sons and other leaders for possible crimes against humanity.
Opposition-controlled radio announced Saturday that the country’s sole legitimate representative was now the National Transitional Council, a group with 31 representatives for most of the regions in Libya.
The council held its first meeting Saturday in the eastern city of Benghazi. They called Benghazi their temporary location until the “liberation” of the capital, according to a decree the council issued late in the day.
Former Justice Minister Mustafa Abdeljeleel, whom the council said had tried to resign from Gadhafi’s government several times, was announced as the council’s new leader.
The council also named a representative for military affairs and established a military council to oversee the “liberation” of Libya and reconstruct the armed forces, according to the radio announcement.
The council said its main missions are to represent all of Libya internationally, liberate the country, draft a constitution and hold elections.
In Benghazi, witnesses said forces loyal to Gadhafi pounded a weapons depot, an airstrike that caused casualties and widespread damage.
One witness said the airstrike there was powerful enough “to destroy a whole city.” News footage showed the remains of buildings and debris and ambulances arriving.
Such aerial attacks have prompted the West to step up discussions about imposing a no-fly zone over Libya. U.S. military and diplomatic officials have said such a zone would be complicated and risky, and international support for it is not strong.
“If it’s ordered, we can do it,” U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said earlier this week, but imposing a no-fly zone “begins with an attack on Libya to destroy the air defenses.”
The Arab League has rejected international intervention, saying Libya is facing “an internal affair that is decided by the people and their governments.” However, the league cannot ignore the suffering of civilians and would consider the imposition of a no-fly zone in coordination with the African Union if fighting were to continue, said Hisham Yousef, chief of staff of the Arab League, on Wednesday.
The fierce fighting has sparked the flight of Libyans and foreigners out of Libya, with nations across the globe scrambling to help people leave.
Almost 200,000 people have fled Libya with nearly equal numbers going to Tunisia and Egypt, the United Nations refugee agency said.
The United States announced Saturday it is contributing $3 million to the International Organization for Migration to help return home thousands of non-Libyans who fled to Tunisia. Four U.S. military flights Saturday were taking a total of 312 Egyptians back to Cairo, the U.S. State Department announced.
Thursday and Friday, about 1,800 people crossed from Libya to Tunisia, and about 3,000 crossed on Saturday, said Firas Kayal, spokesman for the U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees.
He said the situation at the border is “very calm.”
A few thousand Egyptians are in Tunisia awaiting travel home, and more than 10,000 Bangladeshis are there awaiting evacuation with hundreds more still arriving, Kayal said.
The agency confirmed that a Bangladeshi migrant worker died after a heart attack from the exhaustion of walking to the border. Many migrant workers told aid workers they had to walk to the border because soldiers took their money and they couldn’t afford paying for a taxi.