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UN experts says Islamic State group is expanding in Libya

Mideast Libya US Islamic State

Libyan security forces stand in front of the security headquarters, one showing his weapon with a Libyan flag, in the western city of Sabratha, Libya, Saturday, Feb. 20, 2016. American fighter-bombers struck an Islamic State militant training camp in rural Libya near Sabratha Friday, killing dozens. Serbian officials say two Serbian embassy staffers who had been held hostage since November are believed to have been killed in the airstrikes. Washington and its European allies are seeking to end the interminable divisions among Libyan factions to form a unity government that the West can support in fighting the jihadis. AP

UNITED NATIONS — UN experts say the political and security vacuum in Libya has been exacerbated by the Islamic State group which has significantly expanded its control over territory in the conflict-torn country.

The experts said in a report to the UN Security Council circulated Thursday that all parties in the conflict are continuing to receive illicit arms transfers, some with support from member countries.

These weapons are not only influencing the instability but are having “a negative impact on the security situation in Libya and its political transition,” the report said.

Libya has effectively been a failed state since the 2011 ouster and death of longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi which led to the country’s military collapse and fragmentation by powerful militias.

READ: Obama looks to take fight vs ISIS in Libya

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