Forces loyal to a rogue general clashed with former rebel Islamist groups in lawless Benghazi of eastern Libya killing at least 13 people today.
The violence in what was the cradle of Libya's 2011 revolution comes weeks after the government acknowledged for the first time the existence of "terrorist groups" in the country and said it was mobilising against them.
Authorities have been avoiding a full-blown confrontation with the heavily armed ex-rebels who have bastions in Benghazi and other eastern regions, until they can bolster the army and police.
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Warplanes backed up the attack on the Islamists who responded with anti-aircraft fire.
The two groups also fought pitched battles in Sidi Fradj, south of Benghazi and witnesses said Haftar's men seized the headquarters of Rafallah al-Sahati militia.
Medical sources at Al-Marj hospital, east of the city, where Haftar's casualties were taken, said four bodies and 60 wounded were brought in.
Benghazi hospitals gave a toll of nine dead and around 40 wounded, without identifying them.
Haftar heads a group calling itself the "National Army" which launched "a large-scale operation to flush terrorists out of Benghazi", said a spokesman, Mohammed al-Hijazi.
"This is not a civil war. It's an operation against terrorist groups," said Hijazi, who like Haftar was a former officer in Kadhafi's army before defecting.
Libya's armed forces chief of staff, Abdessalam Jadallah al-Salihin, denied any army involvement in the Benghazi clashes.
"The (regular) army has nothing to do with the clashes. The army did not give any orders for any sort of operation in Benghazi," he said.
Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thani denounced Haftar's forces as "outlaws" and told a news conference in Tripoli that the army was "in control on the ground", urging restraint in Benghazi.