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Libya launches major security operation in Zawiya after clashes near key oil refinery

News RoomBy News RoomMay 9, 2026
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In the city of Zawiya, western Libya, a tense Friday dawn shattered into fierce armed clashes. The crackle of gunfire and the echo of explosions spread through several neighborhoods, with a particular and alarming focus on the area surrounding the Zawiya oil refinery—a cornerstone of Libya’s energy infrastructure. This eruption prompted the Zawiya Security Directorate and the Joint Security Room to announce a sweeping security operation, authorized by judicial warrants. This operation, encompassing raids, arrests, and searches, targets a litany of grave crimes threatening public safety: from murder, kidnapping, and extortion to the trafficking of drugs, weapons, and people. The violence, involving heavy weapons, swiftly spilled into residential areas, causing panic among citizens who were urged by emergency services to stay indoors and venture out only for absolute necessity.

The clashes, reported by local sources to have begun before dawn and continued sporadically, forced a critical and immediate response from Libya’s oil sector. Shells landing within the operational areas of the Zawiya oil complex triggered a drastic precautionary measure. The National Oil Corporation and the Zawiya Oil Refining Company announced a complete shutdown of the refinery and cleared the adjacent port of tankers. This decisive action was taken to protect lives, safeguard critical infrastructure, and prevent potential environmental disasters. While firefighting crews and monitoring teams remained, other workers and students were evacuated. The corporation emphasized that fuel supplies to the capital, Tripoli, and surrounding regions remained unaffected for the moment, thanks to contingency plans. However, the incident starkly highlighted the vulnerability of Libya’s most vital economic assets to its pervasive security instability.

While no official authority has definitively named the combatants, local reports indicate the fighting is between rival armed groups vying for influence and control within the city, particularly over areas proximate to the lucrative refinery. This ambiguity underscores the fractured nature of power in Libya. Zawiya itself is a strategic and sensitive hub, home to one of the nation’s largest refineries, a node in vital domestic supply networks, a center for intense commercial activity, and a transit point for irregular migration. Its history is marked by periodic tension and clashes, which have previously led to the closure of major roads like the coastal highway, severing the link between Tripoli and the Tunisian border. This latest eruption is a microcosm of the complex security and political paralysis Libya has endured since 2011, with the country divided between rival eastern and western governments and international efforts to unify institutions and hold elections stalled.

This distressing security event contrasts sharply with a recent narrative of recovery in Libya’s oil sector. Despite the ongoing political crisis, production levels have seen a marked rebound this year, approaching pre-2011 rates. Data indicates average output reached about 1.43 million barrels per day in April and May 2026, the highest in over a decade. This improvement is fueled by several factors: a unified national budget in April 2026 enabling infrastructure rehabilitation, improved operating conditions at major fields, and the full-capacity resumption of the giant Sharara field. With ambitions to raise production to 1.6 million barrels per day by year’s end and 2 million thereafter, Libya aims to reclaim a leading position in the global market. This rebound is particularly timely, as geopolitical tensions in key shipping lanes like the Strait of Hormuz have increased international demand for reliable supplies.

Libyan oil holds significant strategic value. Its crude is classified as “sweet, light”—high in quality due to low sulphur content and ease of refinement, making it ideal for producing premium derivatives like gasoline and diesel. Furthermore, Libya holds the largest proven oil reserves in Africa, cementing its role as a key player within OPEC and its crude as a strategic balancer for global markets. Prior to the 2011 revolution, the sector enjoyed stability, with production averaging 1.6 million barrels per day and exports predominantly directed to European markets like Italy, France, and Germany. The current recovery echoes that past potential but remains perpetually hostage to the nation’s unresolved conflicts.

The clashes in Zawiya therefore represent a direct threat to this fragile economic progress. The shutdown of a major refinery, even precautionary, is a stark reminder that Libya’s path to stability and prosperity is paved with volatile security. The nation’s oil wealth is both its lifeblood and a point of contention, drawing the focus of competing groups. For the residents of Zawiya, Friday’s violence was a terrifying disruption of daily life. For Libya, it was another alarm that the gradual healing of its most vital economic sector remains vulnerable to the sudden wounds inflicted by its unhealed political and security divisions. The country’s future depends on reconciling these two narratives—the promising recovery of its oil and the perilous instability that can, at any moment, bring it to a halt.

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