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Siege of Bani Walid (2012)


FieldValue
conflictSiege of Bani Walid
partofPost-civil war violence in Libya
date9 September – 26 October 2012
()
placeBani Walid, Libya
combatant1Libya Pro-government forces
*Libya Shield<ref>{{Cite weburlhttps://libyaherald.com/2012/09/all-benghazi-militia-to-be-put-under-government-control-others-to-be-disbanded-official/title=All Benghazi militia to be put under National Army control, others to be disbanded: officialfirst=Georgelast=Grantdate=23 September 2012accessdate=25 May 2023}}
combatant2Libya Pro-Gaddafi forces
commander1Libya Mohammed Magariaf
Libya Abdurrahim El-Keib
Flag of the Libyan National Army.svg Yousef Mangoush
commander2Libya Col. Salim al Waer
strength12,000 Libyan Army
10,000~ Libya Shield
strength2600 (Misratan claim)
casualties132 killed, 244 wounded
casualties226–31 fighters and civilians killed, 103+ wounded
casualties3130 civilians killed (Bani Walid elder claim)
22 civilians killed (state news agency claim)
resultMarginal Pro-Government victory
* Libyan government recaptures the city of Bani Walid<ref>{{cite newstitleGaddafi stronghold Bani Walid captured by Libya government troops
urlhttps://www.theguardian.com/world/2012/oct/24/bani-walid-captured-by-libya-governmentaccessdate=8 January 2023newspaper=The Guardiandate=24 October 2012}}
* Sporadic attacks continue in the city in mid-December<ref name"libyaherald.com"

()

  • Libya Shield
  • Misratan militia
  • Warfalla tribe
  • Brigade 93 Libya Abdurrahim El-Keib Flag of the Libyan National Army.svg Yousef Mangoush 10,000~ Libya Shield 22 civilians killed (state news agency claim)
  • Libyan government recaptures the city of Bani Walid{{cite news|title=Gaddafi stronghold Bani Walid captured by Libya government troops
  • Sporadic attacks continue in the city in mid-December The siege of Bani Walid was a military conflict in Libya.

History

Bani Walid is an oasis town in western Libya which has a historic rivalry with the city of Misrata. During the civil war in 2011, Bani Walid remained a bastion of support for the government of Muammar Gaddafi until the very end of the war, while Misrata was one of the first towns to rise up, emerging victorious from a months-long siege. After the end of the war, a number of Misratan militias made efforts to capture those people who they believed were linked to the previous government.

After a string of abuses, local fighters in Bani Walid retook control of their town and expelled the new government from the city. The brigade was then involved in revenge kidnappings with Misrata during the majority of 2012.{{cite news

In July, while they were holding two Misratan journalists, fighters in Bani Walid captured and tortured Misratan militiaman Omran Shaaban, one of the original captors of Gaddafi at the end of the battle of Sirte. He died later of his wounds. In response, the Libyan Congress authorized the use of force against Bani Walid to capture those responsible for the deaths, setting a deadline of 5 October for the town to peacefully comply. The local government of Bani Walid rejected the decision, stating that no true judiciary system existed in Libya.

Following this event, the armed forces of the new government and allied independent militias mounted a siege on the city.

Fighting

At the end of September, the Libyan Shield brigade from the Libyan government and Misrata militias cut the roads leading to Bani Walid, preventing civilian supplies from entering the city. Amnesty International protested against the siege of the city.{{cite web

On 2 October, clashes erupted between the pro-government militias from Misrata and local militiamen in Bani Walid. One person was killed and 5-10 were wounded.{{cite news |url-status = dead

On 10 October, violent clashes erupted between Bani Walid militias and Misrata militias in the valley of Mardum, 10 km east of Bani Walid. One Bani Walid fighter was killed and two others injured, while the overall death toll was put at 10 killed.{{cite journal

On 17 October, Bani Walid was shelled once again as ground clashes raged. Five government militiamen were killed and 44 wounded in the fighting,{{cite news | archive-url = https://archive.today/20130124182753/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5g7FkjTes4WIv3H2yIcQw0il5kiMA?docId=CNG.84104af02afdc00c1fb46ca311ffabed.421 | url-status = dead | archive-date = 24 January 2013

On 18 October, around 2,000 Libyan National Army units and its aligned militias, mainly from city of Misrata, started, after failed negotiations between the government and the local council, full-scale attack on Bani Walid. Army spokesman claimed that army moved quickly and secured town airport and was closing to city centre. This was denied by residents of the town who claimed that the airport was still under local militias control and that the army had not entered the town.{{cite web

On 19 October, the Misrata militias and the Libyan army had pulled back, and the president of the transitional congress imposed a 48-hour ceasefire, condemning the "unauthorized assault" of the Misrata and government forces. Eight government soldiers and militiamen were killed in the fighting, while 12 people from Bani Walid, fighters and residents.{{cite web

Their closest position to Bani Walid was some 25 miles from the town itself, a point captured during the offensive between 16 and 18 October. Despite claims from Margarief that the resolution needed to be peaceful, the Libyan Army and its allied militia was preparing another assault, moving heavy weapons and ammunition to the battlefield.

The shelling on the city and its outskirts continued and the ceasefire was ignored, with five residents, including a child, killed and 40 houses destroyed by the rockets fired by the militias. The shelling was concentrated on the Valley of Mardoum. The military commander of Bani Walid stated that his forces were still in full control of the city. Libyan Shields forces and Misrata militias stated that their offensive had been sanctioned by the government, while a military official denied it, adding to the confusion.{{cite web

On 20 October, Misrata militias launched another assault against Bani Walid, trying to push into the city center. At least nine Misrata soldiers were killed and 122 others were injured.{{cite web

Some civilians were leaving Bani Walid because of the random shelling killing civilians and the lack of food and drink. Militiamen said that they had a list of wanted people inside Bani Walid and that there were in addition hundreds more gunmen defending the city.{{cite news

On 21 October, the shelling from Misrata militias on the city resumed with smoke flying over some parts of the city, Abdelkarim Ghomaid, a Bani Walid commander reported. He added that they had captured 16 armed cars from Misrata militias.{{cite news

In Tripoli, around 500 protesters invaded the grounds of the Libyan parliament to protest against the attacks on Bani Walid.

On 22 October, more clashes near the town left another two pro-government fighters dead.

On 23 October Colonel Ali al-Shekhili claimed that the Army has control of the airport, hospital and other important places. The Airport takeover, together with the military occupation of Mordum, Shmeagh and Tniena districts on the outskirts was confirmed by one of the refugees who fled the city. The Colonel said that the Army met little resistance and said that they are shelling the city. A local said that the Army is entering the city with bulldozers demolishing houses.

On 24 October, pro-government fighters mostly from Libya Shield brigade, militia under command of the Ministry of Defence, took control of centre of the city. Army and militia units still faced resistance in certain parts of the town. The defenders had retreated from the city to the nearby valleys.

On 25 October, Muammar Gaddafi loyalists hold out in last stand at Bani Walid, just to be scattered by the next day when pro-government forces freely roamed the city.

Aftermath

On 30 October, Libyan Minister of Defence Osama al-Juwail came into conflict with army chief-of-staff Yousef Mangoush over the control of the army over the oasis town. While Mangoush claimed that military operations have ceased and town is under its control, the defence minister stated that militia outside the army's command, not the army itself, are in control of Bani Walid. This was not the first time when Mangoush and Juwail have disagreed, with minister being strongly in favour of greater ministry, rather than military, control over the army.

Refugees were also reportedly not allowed to return to their homes, and journalists were forbidden to enterto the city by soldiers and militiamen manning the checkpoints on the outskirts of the city, despite army promises of right of return.

On 1 November, an AFP reporter was able to enter the town and reported heavy damage from the fighting. The residential area near the university, several buildings in the Gweida district and several public buildings were destroyed by fire, which was blamed by a local medic on militias from both Bani Walid and Misrata, as well as with common criminals. The correspondent also witnessed three separate incidents of thefts by Misratan militiamen. The town still remained largely empty, with only a few police and army patrols in the centre.

On 16 December, fresh fighting breaks out in Bani Walid. Members of the security forces clashed with armed men in the central Dahra area of Bani Walid today, leaving three members of the armed force dead and a number of other security personnel injured. AFP - Armed men killed four policemen and two soldiers Sunday in separate attacks in Libya, including one in a former bastion of Moamer Kadhafi's regime that was toppled last year, security officials said.

On October 5, 2013 Gunmen killed at least 12 Libyan soldiers in an attack on a checkpoint near the city of Bani Walid, a former stronghold of supporters of Muammar Gadhafi, security officials said on Saturday. The ambush happened on the road between Bani Walid and the town of Tarhouna, where the army had a checkpoint. They came under heavy gunfire. Between 12 and 15 soldiers were killed," said Ali Sheikhi, a spokesman for the army joint chief of staff.

References

References

  1. (10 September 2012). "Fighters enter Gaddafi stronghold of Bani Walid". Reuters.
  2. "Capture of Libyan town smacks of revenge, not reconciliation".
  3. Grant, George. (23 September 2012). "All Benghazi militia to be put under National Army control, others to be disbanded: official".
  4. "Wolfgang Pusztai - Libya – Perspectives for the Security Situation after the Elections".
  5. "Former Gadhafi spokesman denies capture | Technology - Home".
  6. 1 killed and 10 wounded (2 October),[http://www.libyaherald.com/?p=15547] 6-11 killed, 2+ wounded (10 October),[http://reliefweb.int/report/libya/deadly-clashes-rock-libyas-bani-walid] 12 killed and 75 wounded (17–18 October),[http://www.libyaherald.com/?p=16430][https://archive.today/20130124182753/http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5g7FkjTes4WIv3H2yIcQw0il5kiMA?docId=CNG.84104af02afdc00c1fb46ca311ffabed.421] 4 killed and 16 wounded (20 October),[http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/292848/26-killed-more-than-200-wounded-in-clashes-in-ex-gadhafi-bastion-medics][http://www.naharnet.com/stories/en/57730-at-least-2-dead-in-shelling-of-ex-gadhafi-bastion-in-libya] 3 killed (23 October),[http://www.aljazeera.com/news/africa/2012/10/2012102373313916194.html] total of 26-31 reported killed and 103+ wounded
  7. Dettmer, Jamie. (24 October 2012). "Ex-Gaddafi Stronghold Surrenders to Pro-Government Forces". The Daily Beast.
  8. (2013-10-09). "Fresh fighting breaks out in Bani Walid". Libya Herald.
  9. "Libya attacks kill four policemen, two soldiers - FRANCE 24".
  10. (2012-10-21). "Libya: 22 militiamen killed in assault on Gadhafi loyalist stronghold". Fox News.
  11. "CBC.ca News - Pro-Gadhafi forces battle for Bani Walid".
  12. (2009-09-17). "Associated Press | The Register-Guard | Eugene, Oregon". Hosted2.ap.org.
  13. (2012-10-21). "UPDATE 3-Protesters break into grounds of Libya's parliament". Af.reuters.com.
  14. "Civilians flee besieged former Gaddafi stronghold in Libya".
  15. (23 October 2012). "Army pushes into Bani Walid as Libya marks anniversary". Reuters.
  16. Grant, George. (23 October 2012). "Bani Walid residents say military in control of surrounding districts as tens of thousands flee".
  17. (24 October 2012). "Pro-government forces take control of old Gaddafi bastion Bani Walid". Reuters.
  18. [http://www.dailytelegraph.com.au/libyan-militia-takes-former-gaddafi-town/story-fnejo58q-1226503114782 Libyan Militia Takes Former Gaddafi Town] ''The Daily Telegraph'' {{dead link. (May 2023)
  19. Chris Stephen in Bani Walid. (2012-10-25). "Muammar Gaddafi loyalists hold out in last stand at Bani Walid". theguardian.com.
  20. "Libyan army has 'no control' in Bani Walid - Africa". Al Jazeera English.
  21. Grant, George. (30 October 2012). "Defence minister says army chief has "no control" over Bani Walid".
  22. "Libya town wracked by political score-settling".
  23. "Libyan checkpoint ambush kills at least 12 soldiers". The Daily Star.
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