Advertisement

Islamic State loses control of morality prison, mosque in Libya's Sirte

By Andrew V. Pestano
The Libyan city of Sirte has known constant fighting for over half a decade, as this image shows rebels fighting against former Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi in 2011. Sirte was Gadhafi's hometown and the city in which he died. The Islamic State would later seize the city of Sirte. U.S.-backed militias have been working since June to end the Islamic State's reign in Sirte and their efforts further advanced on Sunday after taking important territory. File Photo by Amru Taha/UPI
The Libyan city of Sirte has known constant fighting for over half a decade, as this image shows rebels fighting against former Libyan ruler Moammar Gadhafi in 2011. Sirte was Gadhafi's hometown and the city in which he died. The Islamic State would later seize the city of Sirte. U.S.-backed militias have been working since June to end the Islamic State's reign in Sirte and their efforts further advanced on Sunday after taking important territory. File Photo by Amru Taha/UPI | License Photo

SIRTE, Libya, Aug. 22 (UPI) -- The Islamic State is losing further control of the Libyan city of Sirte as pro-government, U.S.-backed militias said they captured the town's main mosque and a prison.

The Al-Bunyan Al-Marsoos militia group on Sunday said its forces advanced into two residential areas that held some of the last key hideouts of the Islamic State in Sirte. The militias' offensive against the Islamic State in Sirte began in June, backed by U.S. airstrikes since Aug. 1 after weeks of stalemates.

Advertisement

Positions captured on Sunday after morning airstrikes include the al-Ribatt mosque, the Sahara Bank and the former Internal Security Agency, which was used as a morality prison by the Islamic State, also identified as Daesh, ISIS and ISIL.

Sirte was the Islamic State's stronghold in Libya but its dominance in the city has decreased since the militia's efforts began in June -- particularly after U.S. airstrikes were introduced. On Aug. 10, militias said they seized the last IS headquarters -- the heavily fortified Ouagadougou Center. The militias then worked to hunt down scattered Islamic State militants hiding in Sirte's residential neighborhoods.

Advertisement

Latest Headlines