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WAR REPORT
Hundreds of weapons stockpiles still in Libya: UN
by Staff Writers
United Nations (AFP) Oct 26, 2011


International inspectors have to visit hundreds of suspected weapons stockpiles in Libya amid growing fears that huge numbers of shoulder-fired missiles have been looted, a UN envoy said Wednesday.

Ian Martin, head of the UN mission in Libya, also told a Security Council meeting that new previously undeclared sites for storing chemical weapons had been uncovered since the fall of Moamer Kadhafi's government.

World powers have raised fears that militant groups in neighboring countries have obtained Kadhafi's weapons and that the arms could fall into the hands of Al-Qaeda followers.

Kadhafi's regime had "accumulated the largest known stockpile of anti-aircraft missiles," Martin said.

"Thousands were destroyed during NATO operations. But I have to report to you our increasing concerns over the looting and likely proliferation of MANPADS," or Man-Portable Air Defense Systems, Martin told the 15-member Security Council.

He said munitions and large numbers of mines had also been looted.

Nuclear and chemical weapons materials are mainly controlled by National Transitional Council forces.

But Martin noted that "it has become clearer that there are additional sites with previously undeclared chemical weapons or materials that the government is about to formally declare" to international inspectors.

International experts working with the NTC had identified MANPADS sites and storage areas, mainly in eastern Libya, though Martin cautioned that "hundreds" of suspected sites should still be inspected.

He said mines had been laid around many cities and that there were large quantities of unexploded bombs and missiles in Kadhafi's hometown of Sirte and in Bani Walid.

"In Tripoli, many stockpiles are suspected in residential areas, including in schools and hospitals, where they seem to have been moved by Kadhafi forces to conceal them from airstrikes. They mostly remain unsecured," Martin said.

The surface-to-air missiles can be used against civilian jets and other ordnance can easily be converted into car bombs and roadside explosives, according to experts.

Human Rights Watch said Tuesday that two unguarded sites it has inspected near Sirte contained surface-to-air missiles, tank and mortar rounds, large numbers of munitions and thousands of guided and unguided aerial weapons.

The group said that while its representatives were at one sites, which had already been looted, civilians and armed fighters arrived with pickup trucks to remove more weapons.

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Libya campaign 'over', NATO seeks other ways to help: France
Paris (AFP) Oct 26, 2011 - France insisted Wednesday that NATO's campaign in Libya was over and said it was seeking other ways to help the country, after Libya's leader urged the alliance to continue operations until year's end.

"We are in a new phase," French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said after Libya's interim leader Mustafa Abdel Jalil called on NATO to continue its Libya campaign until the end of the year.

"The military engagement, which accomplished the objectives we were pursuing, is now over. Is there another way to accompany the NTC (new leaders) in this period, which is still a transitional period? We will look at this," he told journalists.

"We are studying this question with our partners and with the secretary general of the alliance," Juppe said.

Abdel Jalil, the head of the National Transitional Council, on Wednesday urged NATO to continue its Libya campaign, saying loyalists of slain despot Moamer Kadhafi still pose a threat to the country.

In the wake of Kadhafi's capture and death last week, NATO's decision-making body, the North Atlantic Council (NAC), had been expected to agree formally on Wednesday to set October 31 as the date to end the seven-month-old air war.

Diplomats in Brussels said NATO had decided to delay a formal decision to end Libyan air operations until Friday after the NTC's request for an extension and a Russian demand for UN consultations.



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WAR REPORT
Clouds darken Libya's spring
Washington (UPI) Oct 25, 2011
Libya has officially been declared "liberated" and its former dictator Moammar Gadhafi is dead and buried. Now a new war for the country's future begins. Shariah, Islam's strict religious code of behavior, is now the "basic source" of law in Libya. A new interim government prime minister and Cabinet are supposed to be installed by the rebel's National Transitional Council within a month ... read more


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