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News ID: 87908
Publish Date : 22 February 2021 - 21:37

Brits Involved in Aiding Libya’s Renegade Commander

LONDON (Middle East Eye) -- British citizens, including a Dubai-based businesswoman, were involved in a failed attempt to provide support to Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar, a UN investigation has found.
Amanda Kate Perry, co-manager of Opus Capital Management, was listed alongside two former Royal Marines as part of Project Opus, an attempt by private security contractor Erik Prince to deploy a force of foreign mercenaries and weapons in 2019 to strongman Khalifa Haftar, who has fought to overthrow the UN-backed Libyan government.
In a report detailed by U.S. media on Friday, UN investigators said Prince - an ally of former U.S. President Trump - had violated a UN embargo on Libya for the $80 million operation, which included plans to form a hit squad to track and kill Libyan commanders opposed to Haftar, including some who were also European Union citizens.
The plot failed after promised equipment failed to materialize and the group were forced to make a night-time evacuation.
According to details from the report listed in the The Times, Opus Capital Management coordinated the operation. Documents in the report noted that the company said attempts to buy "air ammunition, ground weapons, ground ammunition and night vision” equipment was blocked by the government of Jordan.
Prince, a former Navy SEAL and the brother of Trump’s education secretary Betsy DeVos, gained infamy as the head of the Blackwater private security firm, whose contractors were accused of killing unarmed Iraqi civilians in Baghdad in 2007.
Four who were convicted were pardoned by Trump last year.  
The accusation exposes Prince to possible UN sanctions, including a travel ban, the Times said.
Prince did not cooperate with the UN inquiry and his lawyer declined to comment to the New York Times, it added.
Oil-rich Libya has been torn by civil war since the toppling and killing of dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.
The country has in recent years been split between a Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli, and an eastern-based administration, backed by Haftar, who has faced charges of war crimes.
In 2019, Trump praised the strongman for his role in "fighting terrorism” in Libya.
A new interim executive for the country was chosen on February 5 by the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum in Switzerland, comprising 75 participants selected by the UN to represent a broad cross-section of society.