Al-Jazeera correspondent in Libya reported renewed confrontations between the forces of the National Accord Government and the forces of retired Major General Khalifa Haftar, south of the capital, Tripoli.

A source in the Al-Wefaq government forces said that three of Haftar's fighters were killed in the clashes that took place at the axis of the Hadaba Project, south of Tripoli, and added that Haftar's forces tried to retrieve points in the Ain Zara hub before the Al-Wefaq forces confronted them.

In the Wadi al-Rabi` axis, south of the capital, al-Wefaq government forces launched an attack on points where Haftar's forces were stationed.

In Sirte, the Sirte Jafra Operations Room affiliated to the Al-Wefaq government announced that Egyptian and Emirati warplanes and a march increased its bombardment of the Al-Wefaq positions, after killing the commander of the Sirte liberation operations room of Haftar and his senior aides.

She indicated that the National Accord government planes launched air strikes, for their part, bombing the locations of Haftar forces in the Abu Qurain axis and Al-Washaka, east of the city of Misrata.

Turkey's delegate to the United Nations, Cınirlioglu, accused Egypt of seeking to overthrow the legitimate government in Libya and establishing an authoritarian military regime in this country.

In a letter addressed to the President of the UN Security Council on March 24th, Ihsanoglu accused Cairo of continuing to destabilize Libya and attacking legitimacy there.

The renewed confrontations come despite the armistice calls due to the spread of Corona virus, and with the tightening of curfews in the capital, Tripoli.

The Presidential Council of the Al-Wefaq government issued a decision to extend the curfew from two o'clock in the morning to seven in the morning, to be implemented on Monday.

The decision includes a total ban on movement between cities, in addition to setting official working hours from nine in the morning until twelve noon to limit the spread of Corona.