A car bomb exploded in Derna in eastern Libya on Sunday, killing at
least seven people and wounding 19 others, medics and residents said, as
Islamic State (ISIS) militants pressed an offensive to retake the port city.
It
was not immediately clear whether Islamic State was responsible for the
car bomb. Accurate information is difficult to obtain in Derna, a
remote city controlled by Islamists outside government control.
Islamic
State has built up a significant presence in Libya, exploiting a
security vacuum as two rival governments battle for power four years
after the ousting of Muammar Gaddafi.
But Islamic State was
expelled from Derna in June by rival Islamist groups backed up by
residents angry over the arrival of foreign fighters and clerics in the
city.
Air strike
Islamic
State fighters were trying on Sunday to retake Derna, residents said.
The rival Islamist Abu Salim Martyrs Brigade managed to repulse their
attack, but fighting with heavy weapons raged on the eastern edge of the
city late into Sunday night, they said.
An Islamist commander
opposing Islamic State was killed, Islamic State said, adding others had
been killed and wounded. But no further details were immediately
available.
The air force of Libya's official government, which has
been based in the east of the country since losing control of the
capital Tripoli a year ago, conducted an air strike on an area that
Islamic State was trying to take, said Abdul-Karim Sabra, a local
military spokesperson.
The eastern government forces have had a presence near Derna for more than a year but have not tried to take the city.
The government and parliament based in Tripoli are not recognised internationally.
Both
Libyan administrations are allied to loose groups of former
anti-Gaddafi rebels who have divided up along political, tribal and
regional lines.
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