Libya missile strikes point to possible UAE role: UN report

AFP  |  United Nations 

UN experts are investigating missile strikes near Libya's capital that were likely fired by Chinese-made drones and point to possible involvement by the United Arab Emirates, according to a confidential report seen by AFP on Monday.

A UN panel of experts said in the report to the that it had examined photographs of missile debris and had identified the weapon as a air-to-surface missile, which has not been used in before.

That missile is only in use in three countries -- China, and the -- and is paired with the Chinese-made Wing Loong drone.

"The panel is now investigating the probable use of Wing Loong UAV variants by the LNA, or by a third party in support of the LNA," -- Haftar's self-styled (LNA), said the report.

The United Arab Emirates, and are seen as key supporters of Haftar, praising his battlefield successes against the Islamic State group and other extremists in

Haftar launched his offensive to seize on April 4, but his push appears to have stalled after militias backing the government in put up strong resistance. The experts said the use of the drones was "likely a recent non-compliance of the arms embargo as the weapon system reported on has not been identified in before," according to the report sent to the council on Thursday.

The council has been divided on how to address the crisis from Haftar's offensive, with refusing to condemn the Libyan strongman and the taking some time to consider the situation.

The panel presented an interim report after a key expert, Tunisian-German national Moncef Kartas, was arrested in on suspicion of spying for unnamed "foreign parties."

Kartas, who was looking into illegal arms shipments to Libya in violation of the embargo, was arrested on March 26, less than 10 days before Haftar launched his offensive.

The arms embargo was imposed on Libya in 2011 as the country descended into chaos that led to the overthrow of dictator

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

First Published: Tue, May 07 2019. 03:35 IST