UN evacuates 325 refugees from southern Tripoli

ANI  |  Asia 

The on Wednesday evacuated some 325 refugees from a detention centre on the southern outskirts of amid escalating violence near the Libyan capital.

In a statement, the Refugee Agency said that those rescued from the were transported to another detention facility in Azzawya, northwestern Libya, where they were "at reduced risk of being caught up" in ongoing fighting between renegade military Khalifa Haftar's eastern forces and troops loyal to the UN-recognised (GNA).

"The dangers for refugees and migrants in have never been greater than they are at present," said Matthew Brook, UNHCR of Mission in

"It is vital that refugees in danger can be released and evacuated to safety," Brook added.

The evacuation was triggered by reports on Tuesday regarding the use of armed violence against detainees who protested against the conditions in which they were being held.

While there were no bullet wounds, 12 refugees endured physical attacks that required hospital treatment, the statement said.

The relocation was carried out with support from the Libyan authorities, UN Support Mission in (UNSMIL) and the (OCHA), who facilitated a humanitarian corridor to make the transfer possible, the statement added.

The relocation is the fourth UNHCR-organised transfer since the recent escalation of the conflict in as our teams endeavour to get detainees out of harm's way.

UNHCR has relocated more than 825 refugees from the Ain Zara, Abu Salim, Qaser Ben Gasheer, Tajoura and Zintan detention centres in the past two weeks alone, the statement read.

However, about 3,000 refugees and migrants still remain trapped in detention centres in and remain at risk from the "deteriorating security situation" around the capital. Many of the detainees fled war and persecution in their home countries, it said.

already removed its entire contingent of peacekeeping forces comprising of 15 CRPF personnel on April 6 from Tripoli, a move which was followed by countries like the and

More than 200 people have lost their lives and 913 have been wounded ever since clashes erupted in the region.

Libya has been largely divided into two factions ever since the death of its dictator

The LNA-backed parliament controls the east of Libya, while the UN-backed interim GNA governs Libya's western region from Tripoli.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, April 25 2019. 06:02 IST