Erdogan's mercenaries in Libya discontent over delay in receiving financial dues
Day after day, discontent rises among the ranks of the armed
militias loyal to Libya’s Government of National Accord (GNA), amid growing
concern about its fate and its future, against the backdrop of Tripoli's
increasing dependence on Syrian mercenaries.
Libyan activists published a video clip showing protests in
which dozens of Syrian mercenaries took part, who demonstrated in a camp inside
the Police College in the Libyan capital for not having received their
financial dues that the GNA promised to pay them after the agreement with the
Turkish side to transfer them to Tripoli. Libyan media reported that the
mercenaries' late dues amounted to about $10,000 dollars per person.
In this context, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
revealed in a report published on Friday, January 1, the feelings of resentment
that prevailed among the pro-Ankara mercenaries who were sent by Turkey to
Libya.
According to sources at the Syrian Observatory, the leaders
of the factions such as the Hamza Division, Suleyman Shah Division, the Levant
Front, and the Mu'tasim Brigade are stalling the delivery of the salaries of
the fighters. Also, sums of money are deducted from their monthly salary,
ranging from $100-$300, in addition to trading their salaries, which is one of
the most important reasons for delaying delivery, amid the fighters' demands
for the Turks to hand over their salaries directly instead of delivery through
the leaders.
For his part, the director of the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights, Rami Abdul Rahman, revealed the details of the "financial
crisis" that the mercenary fighters are suffering from.
Abdul Rahman said, in televised statements, that about 7,000
mercenaries have remained in Libya so far, adding, "They should receive
monthly salaries ranging between $2,000 and $3,000."
"The delay in salaries made the mercenaries in a state
of great dissatisfaction, especially after they were waiting to return to their
country, Syria, after the Libyan-Libyan accord," he continued.
"They are in a difficult situation. They are deducted
from their salaries, and the salaries do not reach the families of these people
until late, and they are traded by mercenary leaders in the currency
speculation market," he added.
Abdul Rahman asked why the process of returning mercenaries
to Syria had stopped since November, adding, "We do not know why Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has kept them until this moment in Libya."
"Without any doubt, there will be a rebellion among
these mercenaries, and they may be arrested and put in prisons," he said.
The Syrian Observatory had indicated a few days ago that the
issue of the presence of pro-Ankara mercenaries in Libya was returning to the
fore, especially in light of the suspension of the file by the Turkish
government, which turned the fighters into mercenaries and sent them there
despite the Libyan-Libyan agreement. The return of the factions' fighters from
Libya to Syria is still on hold for 43 days, specifically from the middle of
November, amid news of the return of batches of them at the beginning of 2021,
while no information has been received until the moment about the reasons for
their stay there.
The Observatory stated that the number of conscripts who
went to Libya so far reached about 18,000 mercenaries of Syrian nationality,
including 350 children under the age of 18, and about 10,750 of the mercenaries
of the pro-Turkish factions returned to Syria after the end of their contracts
and taking their financial dues, while the number of jihadists who arrived in
Libya reached 10,000, among them 2,500 of Tunisian nationality.
It is also reported that the death toll of the mercenaries
of the Syrian factions loyal to Ankara in Libya amounted to 496 dead.
In a related development, Turkey continued to transfer
military equipment and weapons to the Al-Watiya air base in Libya in
preparation for the joint exercises that Ankara intends to conduct with the GNA,
while a Libyan military source confirmed that two military cargo planes from
Turkey transported ammunition and weapons to Al-Watiya, amid UN calls for the
formation of an international monitoring committee to support the "fragile
truce" in Libya.
The Libyan source said in exclusive statements to the
Emirati newspaper Al-Ittihad that the planes carry advanced air defense
systems, jamming systems and radar, indicating that a number of Turkish army
elements participating in the exercises with the GNA arrived at the air base.
The source indicated that Turkey is seeking to consolidate
its military presence in the cities of the western region, warning of the
mobilization operations carried out by Ankara, which could push towards the
collapse of the ceasefire agreement and the renewal of fighting.
Moreover, with the extension of its parliament, Turkey has
intensified the stay of Turkish forces in Libya for an additional 18 months of
operating the Turkish air bridge flights between Turkey and its bases in Al-Watiya
and Misrata.
In this context, observers stressed the existence of a
Turkish plan to push for a new war in Libya, noting that Erdogan regime
believes that chaos is the only way to cover up his crimes in Libya. Observers
also pointed out that the sabotage role played by Erdogan is the main reason
for the failure of the parties to reach a political solution that guarantees
the security and stability of the country.



