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Libyan Islamic Fighting Group
Former Islamist armed group
Former Islamist armed group
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Libyan Fighting Group (Al-Jama'a al-Islamiyyah al-Muqatilah bi-Libya) |
| logo | Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) flag.jpg |
| dates | 1990–2017 |
| leader | Abdelhakim Belhadj |
| allegiance | Libya Dawn Coalition |
| motives | Overthrow Muammar Gaddafi and establish an Islamic state. |
| area | |
| ideology | Salafi jihadism |
| Qutbism | |
| financing | Mohammed Benhammedi |
| Sanabal Charitable Committee | |
| designated_as_terror_group_by | USA Delisted in 2017 by the Department of State |
| GBR Delisted in 2019 by the Home Office | |
| UN Sanctioned by the UN 1267 Committee. |
Qutbism Sanabal Charitable Committee GBR Delisted in 2019 by the Home Office UN Sanctioned by the UN 1267 Committee.
The Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG), also known as Al-Jama'a al-Islamiyyah al-Muqatilah bi-Libya (), was an armed Islamist group. Militants participated in the 2011 Libyan Civil War as the Libyan Islamic Movement (al-Harakat al-Islamiya al-Libiya), and are involved in the Libyan Civil War as members of the Libya Shield Force. Alleged militants include alleged Al Qaeda organizer Abd al-Muhsin Al-Libi who now holds a key command position in the Libya Shield Force.
In the 2011 civil war, members claim to have played a key role in deposing Muammar Gaddafi. The force was part of the National Transitional Council.
However the organisation has a troubled history being under pressure from Muammar Gaddafi and shortly after the September 11 attacks, LIFG was banned worldwide (as an affiliate of al-Qaeda) by the UN 1267 Committee. Listed at the Foreign Terrorist Organizations, the group denied ever being affiliated with al-Qaeda, stating that it refused to join the global Islamic front Osama bin Laden declared against the west in 1998.
History
LIFG was founded in 1990 by Libyans who had fought against Soviet forces in Afghanistan, but only revealed its existence publicly in 1995. Its objective was to establish an Islamic state in Libya. According to the Canadian Security Intelligence Service, the group viewed the Gaddafi regime as oppressive and anti-Muslim, and aimed to overthrow it. The group's first armed action came in Benghazi on September 6-7, 1995, resulting in the deaths of some 30 individuals. LIFG claimed responsibility for a failed assassination attempt against Gaddafi in February 1996, which was in part funded by MI6 according to David Shayler, and engaged Libyan security forces in armed clashes during the mid-to-late 1990s. They continued to target Libyan interests and engaged in sporadic clashes with Libyan security forces.
Adnkronos International reported that the group was founded in Afghanistan by Abu Laith Al Libi and other veterans of Soviet occupation of Afghanistan.
Relationship with Al-Qaeda
The LIFG links to Al-Qaeda hail from Afghanistan, where hundreds joined Al-Qaeda. High ranking LIFG operatives inside Al-Qaeda, are the leader of the insurgency Abdel-Hakim Belhadj (also known as Abu Abdullah al-Sadiq), and the recently killed Atiyah Abd al-Rahman, who was killed in a CIA drone strike, and Al-Qaeda's Abu Yahya al-Libi.
The Telegraph reported that senior Al Qaeda members Abu Yahya al-Libi and Abu Laith al-Libi were LIFG members.
In an audio message published in November 2007 Ayman al-Zawahiri and Abu Laith al-Libi claimed that the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group had joined al-Qaeda.
In November 2007 Noman Benotman, described as the "ex-head of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group", published on open letter to al-Qaeda. According to The Times:
In November last year Noman Benotman, ex-head of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group which is trying to overthrow the regime of Muammar Gaddafi, published a letter which asked Al-Qaeda to give up all its operations in the Islamic world and in the West, adding that ordinary westerners were blameless and should not be attacked.
Noman Benotman's letter to Zawahiri was published in Akhbar Libya (News) as an op-ed clarification in November 2007. The gist is that al-Qaeda's efforts have been counterproductive and used as "subterfuge" by some Western countries to extend their regional ambitions. These comments were first aired at a meeting in Kandahar in the summer of 2000.
On 10 July 2009, The Telegraph reported that some member organisations of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group had split with Al Qaeda.
UK Terrorism Act 2000
On 10 October 2005, the United Kingdom's Home Office banned LIFG and fourteen other militant groups from operating in the UK. Under the United Kingdom's Terrorism Act 2000, being a member of a LIFG is punishable with a 10-year prison term. The Financial Sanctions Unit of the Bank of England acting on behalf of HM Treasury issued the orders to freeze all their assets. Mohammed Benhammedi lived and worked in Liverpool at the time of the UN sanction against him. Sergey Zakurko, the father to his Lithuanian mistress was suspended from his job at the Ignalina Nuclear Power Plant (INPP) for fear that the link could pose a security threat.
The group was delisted from the United Kingdom proscribed organizations list in November 2019.
UN-embargoed LIFG affiliates and their subsequent de-listing
On 7 February 2006 the UN embargoed five specific LIFG members and four corporations, all of whom had continued to operate in England until at least October 2005. Those nine are in the following table; the accusations are according to the US State Department.
| Sanabel Relief Agency Limited | Alias SARA, a charity front by which LIFG transacted with other al-Qaeda components (including GICM) via its office in Kabul, prior to the fall of the Taliban. |
|---|
Al-Faqih, Nasuf, and a third man appealed being listed. Their appeal went all the way to the European Union's Court, which ordered the UK to delist the men, and return their passports.
The "Summary of Evidence" from Mohammed Fenaitel Mohamed Al Daihani's Combatant Status Review Tribunal states: "The Sanabal Charitable Committee is considered a fund raising front for the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group."
In June 2011, all of the entities included in the table above were de-listed by the United Nations Security Council Committee.
Reconciliation and mass release of prisoners
In September 2009 a new "code" for jihad, a 417-page religious document entitled "Corrective Studies", was published after more than two years of intense and secret talks between incarcerated leaders of the LIFG and Libyan security officials.
On 9 April 2008, Al Jazeera reported that Libya released at least over 90 members of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group. The Italian press agency Adnkronos International reported the release was due to the efforts of Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, a son of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, and leader of the charity Gaddafi International Foundation for Charity Associations. It reported that a third of the LIFG members Libya was holding were released. A further 200 prisoners were released in March 2010, including group leader Abdelhakim Belhadj.
In January 2011 members of the group threatened a return to violence unless still imprisoned members were released.
Libyan Civil War
In March 2011, members of the LIFG in Ajdabiya declared to the press that the group supports the revolt against Gaddafi's rule, and had placed themselves under the leadership of the National Transitional Council. They also stated that the group had changed its name to Libyan Islamic Movement (al-Harakat al-Islamiya al-Libiya), had around 500–600 militants released from jail in recent years, and denied any past or present affiliation with Al-Qaeda.
A leader of the LIFG, Abdelhakim Belhadj, became the commander of the Tripoli Military Council after the rebels took over Tripoli during the 2011 Battle of Tripoli. In March 2011, Abdel-Hakim al-Hasidi, a leading member of the group, admit to the Italian newspaper Il Sole 24 Ore that his fighters had al-Qaeda links. Al-Hasidi was captured in 2002 in Peshwar, Pakistan, later handed over to the US, and then held in Libya before being released in 2008. He admit in the same interview that he had earlier fought against "the foreign invasion" of Afghanistan.
In September 2011, Ismail Sallabi (a leader of LIFG) said in an interview to The Washington Post: "We want [Libyan Islamic Movement] to be a good government that comes from Islam, that respects human rights and personal freedoms," "The Islamic way is not something dangerous or wrong. The West hears 'Islamic law' and they think we want to lock our women in boxes," "The Islamic groups want a democratic country, and they want to go to the mosque without being arrested. They're looking for freedom like everyone else."
Foreign relations
Designation as a terrorist organization
Countries and organizations below have officially listed the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group as a terrorist organization.
| United States | 17 December 2004 (until 9 December 2015) |
|---|
Notes
References
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- (23 August 2010). "QE.L.11.01. Libyan Islamic Fighting Group". [[United Nations Security Council Al-Qaida Sanctions Committee]].
- "UN list of affiliates of al-Qaeda and the Taliban". Un.org.
- "Foreign Terrorist Organizations – Multimedia Counterterrorism Calendar". Nctc.gov.
- (29 March 2011). "Islamic militant group pledges support to anti-Gadafi rebels". Irish Times.
- (2006). "Chapter 8 -- Foreign Terrorist Organizations". U.S. Department.
- "Libya (1951-present)". University of Central Arkansas Department of Political Science.
- Gambill. (24 March 2005). "The Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG)". [[The Jamestown Foundation]].
- US Department of State, ''Patterns of Global Terrorism 2002''
- Black. (5 September 2011). "The Libyan Islamic Fighting Group – from al-Qaida to the Arab spring". Guardian.
- "Wanted - Atiyah Abd al Rahman".
- (3 November 2007). "Libyan Islamists 'join al-Qaeda'". BBC News.
- link. (13 November 2009, [[Nic Robertson]] and Paul Cruickshank, [[CNN]], 10 November 2009)
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- "Noman Benotman: Advice to Dr Ayman Zawahiri - Libya News".
- Blair. (10 July 2009). "Extremist group announces split from al-Qaeda". [[The Daily Telegraph.
- "Proscribed terrorist groups". UK Home Office.
- (8 February 2006). "Financial Sanctions: Al-Qa'ida and Taliban". Open Source Information.
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- "Proscribed terrorist groups". [[Home Office]].
- (8 February 2006). "Treasury Designates UK-Based Individuals, Entities Financing Al Qaida-Affiliated LIFG".
- (November 2006). "Militant Ideology Atlas".
- (2007-07-17). "Libyan jailed on terror charges". [[BBC News]].
- (August 2016}} Nasuf was removed from the UN list 1267 list a few years later, at the British government's request.{{Cite web). "Uncorrected Evidence -".
- (2011-06-16). "Case T-134/11 before the General Court - Al-Bashir Mohammed Al-Faqih, Ghunia Abdrabbah, Taher Nasuf, Sanabel Relief Agency Ltd v. European Commission - Intervention by the Council". [[European Union]].
- (2010-09-29). "Al-Bashir Mohammed Al-Faqih and others v Council of the European Union (United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland intervening)". [[European Union]].
- (2010-10-08). "Wrong to give passport back to 'terror suspect' says MP". [[Manchester Evening News]].
- "News from The Associated Press".
- "Security Council 1267 Sanctions Committee Approves Deletion of Eight Entries from Al-Qaida Sanctions List".
- (9 April 2008). "Libya: Scores of prisoners released from jail". [[Adkronos International]].
- (9 April 2008). "Libya releases scores of prisoners". [[Al Jazeera Arabic.
- (1 September 2010). "Ex-Islamists walk free from Libyan jail". [[Reuters]].
- Worthington. (2 September 2010). "Ex-Guantánamo prisoner freed in Libya after three years' detention – and information about "ghost prisoners"". Cageprisoners.
- (12 January 2011). Lighthouse Foundation Media. link
- Swami, Praveen. (25 March 2011). "Libyan rebel commander (Abdel-Hakim al-Hasidi) admits his fighters have al-Qaeda links.". The Daily Telegraph.
- Leila Fadel (14 September 2011) [https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/middle-east/islamists-emerge-in-force-in-new-libya/2011/09/12/gIQAdU10QK_story.html “Islamists emerge in force in new Libya”] {{Webarchive. link. (5 February 2017. ''Washington Post''.)
- "Proscribed Terrorist Organisations".
- "Foreign Terrorist Organizations". U.S. Department of State.
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