Two airstrikes targeting Islamist militia positions in Libya's capital today killed 15 fighters and wounded 30 others, a senior Islamist militia leader and a militia spokesman said.
The militia leader said the warplanes targeted the Interior Ministry and several militia positions, setting fire to a warehouse.
He said two sons of the head of the military council of Misrata militias, Ibrahim Bin Rajab, were among the wounded. He spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorised to speak to journalists.
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Al-Gharyani said militia fighters from other areas and towns were joining the Misrata forces and "our response will be severe."
Libya is witnessing its worst spasm of violence since Moammar Gadhafi was toppled in 2011. Many of the rebel brigades which helped overthrow the longtime dictator have become powerful, heavily armed militias.
A battle for control of Tripoli's international airport and surrounding areas has been raging for weeks, pitting the powerful Zintan militia from the western mountains against the Islamist-allied Misrata militia, named for the coastal city where it waged some of the most intense battles of the uprising.
It was not clear who carried out the airstrikes, but Misrata militia leaders said earlier that the jets belong to forces allied to renegade Gen. Khalifa Hifter, who has been leading a campaign against Islamic extremists.
The fighting has largely destroyed Tripoli's airport and prompted diplomats, foreign nationals and thousands of Libyans to flee.