Members of the forces loyal to Libya's UN-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) gather in the coastal city of Sirte, east of the capital Tripoli, during their military operation to clear the Islamic State group's (IS) jihadists from the city

Libya’s UN-backed unity government suffered a blow in its Tripoli base late Friday when a rival seized key offices in the capital and proclaimed the reinstatement of the former administration.
The Government of National Accord (GNA) is the centerpiece of Western hopes to stem an upsurge of radicalism in the North African nation and halt people trafficking across the Mediterranean that has led to thousands of drownings.
It was intended to replace two rival administrations, one in Tripoli and one in the eastern Cyrenaica region.
But late on Friday the head of the former Tripoli-based Government of National Salvation, Khalifa Ghweil, proclaimed its reinstatement from the offices of a key consultative body of the GNA.
Ghweil has never accepted the legitimacy of the UN-backed government which took control of the administration in Tripoli in April.
He is subject to international sanctions, renewed by the European Union just last month.
In his statement, he declared all members of the GNA “suspended from their duties.”
The UN-backed government riposted with a statement threatening to arrest “those politicians who... attempt to create parallel institutions and destabilize the capital.”
It condemned “efforts to sabotage the political agreement” brokered by the UN last December and denounced the seizure of the Council of State building by an “armed group.”
Libya has two rival parliaments, both elected since the NATO-backed overthrow of longtime dictator Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.

Source: Arab News