Al-Jazeera correspondent in the Libyan capital Tripoli that 14 gunmen from the forces of retired Major General Khalifa Haftar were killed in renewed clashes with soldiers of the government of the Accord Valley Khallet al-Furjan (south of the capital Tripoli).

The correspondent was quoted as a military source as saying that the clashes renewed with medium and heavy weapons between the parties in the region and the hub of Tripoli airport.

A military source said the force had destroyed a number of vehicles carrying anti-aircraft guns and had hoarded a number of vehicles on the airport road.

The Hafar forces managed to control the "transit" camp by airport for hours, before the reconciliation forces could regain control of it again, the Anatolia news agency reported.

The fighting was the heaviest since the start of Ramadan, the agency said.

Al-Jazeera correspondent also reported that Hafar's forces tried to advance in the Khallat al-Furjan axis to relieve pressure on its troops at the airport's hub, but Al-Wifaq forces repelled the attack.

In the same context, an air force source confirmed that the Al-Wifaq government aircraft launched three raids on the positions of the Haftar forces in the Qasr bin Ghashir axis.

The Al-Jazeera correspondent in Tripoli reported that a plane belonging to the forces of Hafr launched overnight raids on several sites belonging to the government of Al-Wefaq, including the headquarters of the Libyan parliament in the capital Tripoli.

The correspondent said that a raid on the headquarters in the Hotel Rixos resulted in material damage to the front of the building, pointing to the occurrence of other raids targeted positions of the operation forces of the anger volcano belonging to the Government of the south of the capital.

It is noteworthy that the night flight of the forces of Hafer returned to bomb sites belonging to the forces of the government of Al-Wefaq after missing a period of the sky of the Libyan capital, and activists were likely to stop for more than a week is due to the destruction of the government flight Al-Wefaq room guidance aircraft in the base of Jafra (central Libya) or in the city (85 kilometers south of Tripoli).