Libyan militia leader freed after his detention sparked deadly clashes
Fighting broke out in Tripoli after Mahmoud Hamza was detained, leaving at least 55 people dead and nearly 150 injured in the worst clashes in Libya for a year.
A Libyan militia leader whose detention sparked clashes that killed 55 people in the capital Tripoli this week has been released, a military official has said.
Gun battles had raged on the streets of Tripoli from Monday night through Tuesday after 444 Brigade leader Mahmoud Hamza was apprehended by the rival Al Radaa Force.
Hamza "was released on Wednesday night and returned to his headquarters south of Tripoli", an official at army headquarters in western Libya told AFP news agency on Thursday.
"He was released under a government-sponsored ceasefire agreement" which also provides for th e "withdrawal of fighters from the front lines", said the official who spoke on condition of anonymity.
Videos circulated on social media on Wednesday night showed Hamza dressed in military fatigues and surrounded by his fighters at the Tekbali barracks south of the Libyan capital.
Fighting broke out in Tripoli after Hamza's detention on Monday, killing 55 people, wounding 146 and forcing the closure of the capital's only civilian airport -- the worst armed clashes seen in Libya for a year.
The two armed groups are among the myriad of militias that have vied for power in the North African country since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that toppled and killed late leader Muammar Gaddafi.
A period of relative stability had led the United Nations to express hope for delayed elections to be held this year.
Calm returned to Tripoli and the Mitiga airport reopened after the ceasefire agreement reached late Tuesday between Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah's government and a social council in the Al Radaa stronghold of Soug el Joumaa in the capital's southeast.
"The situation is stable, with police patrols having been deployed" in the areas that had seen fighting, allowing people to move around, the military official said.
Libya is split between Dbeibah's UN-recognised government in the west and another in the east backed by warlord Khalifa Haftar.