Tehran - FNA
Iranian Ambassador to Tripoli Hossein Akbari took certain regional states responsible for conducting a proxy war in Libya that is destroying the African country's infrastructures.
"The intense conflicts in Libya should be blamed on the interference of the foreign states which are seeking to attain their goals in the African country," Akbari told FNA on Monday.
He warned that the civil war in Libya has resulted in the "rapid devastation of the country's sensitive and vital centers, including the cut of water and power supply in the capital".
Akbari said certain Middle-Eastern and North African countries are afraid of entering the Libyan scene openly, and thus they are leading a proxy war in the African nation.
He said a new wave has risen in the region today, in which certain countries agree and others oppose the Ikhwan Al-Muslimin (Muslim Brotherhood) stream, and this has created a rift among the regional states, adding that this line up is more obvious in the countries which are entangled in insecurity and instability.
Libya's government said earlier this month that it had lost control of most ministries and state institutions located in Tripoli after rival armed groups took over the capital.
Last month, senior officials and the elected parliament moved to the remote Eastern city of Tobruk as an alliance of armed factions led by forces from the Western city of Misrata took control of Tripoli, having expelled a rival group.
Libya is descending into anarchy as former rebels who helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 have turned their guns on each other as they seek to set the country's political agenda and control its vast oil reserves.
"We announce that most ministries, institutions and state bodies in the capital Tripoli are out of our control," the government said in a statement late on Sunday. Armed groups had prevented staff from entering some government buildings, it added.
All ministries, the state-run National Oil Corp (NOC) and central bank are located in the capital.
The persistent violence has not affected oil production but traders have said ownership of the oil might be subject to legal challenges if the Misrata forces take control of the central bank, where crude revenues are booked.
The new forces controlling Tripoli, some with Salafi leanings, have refused to recognize the Tobruk House of Representatives, which has a strong liberal and federalist presence.
They have reconvened the previous parliament, the General National Congress, in which Islamists were strongly represented.
The government lacks the backing of an army or police force to control the various armed groups.