UAE behind oil blockade as Libya again halts oil exports: state firm

Libya's National Oil Corp (NOC) has accused the United Arab Emirates of encouraging warlord Khalifa Haftar militias to reimpose a blockade of oil exports after the departure of the first tanker in six months.

A general view of the El Sharara oilfield, Libya, December 3, 2014.
Reuters

A general view of the El Sharara oilfield, Libya, December 3, 2014.

Libya's National Oil Corp (NOC) has accused the United Arab Emirates of instructing eastern illegal militias in Libya's civil war to reimpose a blockade of oil exports after the departure of the first tanker in six months.

The UAE, along with Russia and Egypt, supports the eastern-based warlord Khalifa Haftar, which on Saturday said the blockade would continue despite it having let a tanker load with oil from storage.

"NOC has been informed that the instructions to shut down production were given to (the LNA) by the United Arab Emirates," it said in a statement on Sunday, resuming force majeure on all oil exports.

Haftar has been on the back foot after Turkish support helped the internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) turn back his 14-month assault on the capital Tripoli.

After the GNA gained ground, NOC also tried to restart production at the Sharara oilfield, but said this effort was quickly shut down and accused Russian mercenaries fighting alongside Haftar of deploying there.

On Friday the Vitol tanker Kriti Bastion docked and loaded at Es Sider port before sailing on Saturday, the first legal export of Libyan oil since the blockade was imposed in January.

NOC said Russian and Syrian mercenaries fighting alongside Haftar now occupied Es Sider.

READ MORE: Libya resumes oil production after months-long shutdown

Loading...

Under international agreements only NOC can produce and export oil and revenues must flow into the Central Bank of Libya. 

Both those institutions are based in Tripoli, seat of the GNA.

Haftar said on Saturday it would keep up the blockade until a list of conditions were met, including channelling oil revenue into a new bank account based outside the country to then be distributed regionally.

On Sunday the United States' Libya embassy said the resumption of the blockade came after "days of intense diplomatic activity" to let NOC resume output, and said it "regrets that foreign-backed efforts" had impeded this.

READ MORE: Russian mercenaries enter Libya's key oil field - National Oil Corporation

Route 6