Clashes renewed between the forces of the National Accord Government and the forces of retired Major General Khalifa Haftar, with a number of fighting hubs southeast of the capital, Tripoli, despite calls for a truce due to the spread of the Corona virus.

A military source in the Al-Wefaq government said that a number of Haftar forces personnel were killed and wounded during the clashes.

The commander of Haftar's forces was also killed in the city of Sirte in a raid by an aircraft of the Government of Concord.

The government has confirmed the monitoring of three flights of military cargo planes that were launched from the Sweihan Air Force Base in Abu Dhabi to the Al-Khadim Emirati base in the south of the city of Marg in eastern Libya.

Despite the call by the United Nations and nine countries to stop the fighting, in order to allow the authorities to confront the Corona epidemic, retired Major General Khalifa Hifter opened several fronts, in search of military and field gains in the time of Corona that he did not achieve in normal times.

Bombing of Haftar sites
A military source from the Al-Wefaq government forces said that government planes bombed sites of Haftar forces in the western city of Sirte.

He added that Al-Wefaq planes destroyed the operations room of Haftar forces in the Al-Washeka area west of Sirte, a truck of ammunition and a gathering of Haftar forces in the way of the river.

In eastern Misrata, a spokesman for the Al-Wefaq government forces, Muhammad Qanunu, said that Al-Wefaq forces had seized a number of military vehicles on the Abu Qurain axis.

He added that Al-Wefaq forces destroyed the mechanisms of Haftar's forces, and that the bodies of his fighters were burned inside UAE armored vehicles.
Kanounou said that foreign aircraft carried out raids in the early morning hours, and Haftar's forces tried to advance to the Al-Wefaq positions, which repelled the attack.

On the Tripoli front, the artillery government of Al-Wefaq bombed Haftar forces in the southern suburbs of the capital in the Al-Tawjar, Al-Tawisha and Ramla axes, to prevent it from regaining the sites it had lost.