Armed groups deployed on Tuesday in suburbs of Libya’s capital, witnesses and local media said, as the country awaited the postponement of a presidential election supposed to take place in three days.
On Tuesday morning, images posted online showed a tank and pickup trucks mounted with machine guns in Fornaj district, close to the university campus, where some roads were blocked with piles of sandbags guarded by armed men.
Schools and the University of Tripoli closed as a precaution but there were no firefights, residents said.
The mobilizations came as Libyans await an official announcement that presidential elections, set for Friday, have been postponed.
The vote is meant to cap a UN-led peace process aiming to move the North African country past a decade of conflict since the country’s 2011 revolt.
But the electoral process has been undermined by divisions over its legal basis and the candidacies of divisive figures.
No party has officially announced that the polls will be delayed. But that is widely viewed as a foregone conclusion, partly due to the difficulty of holding a free and fair vote given the fragile security situation on the ground.
On Tuesday afternoon, roads in Tripoli that had been closed were reopened and fewer gunmen were on the streets, an AFP correspondent said.
Jamila Rizgalla, a professor at the university, told AFP that “teachers, staff and students were asked to evacuate the campus and leave immediately. Lectures were interrupted and the university was closed due to security tensions” in the nearby Ain Zara and Fornaj districts.
Libya’s Tripoli-based unity government — which took power in March with a mandate to take the country to elections — did not immediately comment on the developments.
Armed groups had also deployed in Tripoli’s streets last week after the unity government dismissed Abdulbasit Marwan, a senior military official backed by several of Tripoli’s powerful armed groups.
The United Nation’s Libya mission UNSMIL voiced concern over the armed deployments, warning such mobilization “creates tensions and increases the risk of clashes that could spiral into conflict.”
In a statement, it called for the resolution of any disagreements through dialogue, “particularly at this stage when the country is navigating through a difficult and complex electoral process that should usher in a peaceful transition.”
The Libyan capital is under the control of an array of armed groups affiliated with the defense and interior ministries.
The country has seen a decade of violence since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that overthrew and killed dictator Moamer Qahdafi. Myriad armed groups, foreign forces and mercenaries have filled the void.
Libya has been relatively calm since a landmark cease-fire between eastern and western camps in October 2020, but despite high hopes for peace the UN has struggled to overcome the country’s deep, complex divisions.