Libya rocket attack kills 4 children
ISIS militants claim responsibility for a mortar attack in Benghazi neighbourhood
Four children were killed in rocket attack on an area of the eastern Libyan city of Benghazi where Islamic State in Iraq and Syria militants claimed responsibility for a mortar attack, officials said on Wednesday.
The children were killed on Tuesday when a rocket hit their neighbourhood, near an area where army forces and Islamist brigades have been fighting, Libya's internationally recognised government said in a statement.
"Four innocent children were killed by an extremist terrorist group in one of the ugliest crimes," the government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni said in a statement.
Militants claiming loyalty to ISIS said on Twitter they had fired mortar rockets into the district where the children were killed. They posted pictures purportedly showing their fighters loading and firing mortars, without mentioning the children.
Wider conflict
Benghazi has been a battlefield for a year between army forces loyal to Khalifa Haftar, Thinni's general, and Islamist groups, dividing Libya's second-largest city.
The army flew air strikes against the Islamist groups in the port area on Wednesday, a military source said. There was no immediate word on casualties.
The battle is part of wider conflict between former rebels groups who helped topple Moammar Gadhafi in 2011 but have now fallen out along tribal, regional and political lines.
Security vacuum
ISIS militants have exploited the security vacuum as two governments fight each other, with neither side dominating the other. The militants have killed dozens of foreign Christians and attacked oil fields and a luxury hotel in Tripoli.
Thinni was forced to flee the capital, Tripoli, in August when a rival group seized it and set up a rival administration backing the Benghazi-based Islamist groups.
Army forces have regained some areas in Benghazi lost last year, but the port area and several districts are still dominated by Majlis al-Shura, the umbrella of Islamist brigades.
ISIS militants posted in a separate Twitter message pictures purportedly showing its fighters digging tunnels to gain access to the central port area.