Libya's pro-government forces today cornered Islamic State group jihadists in their last holdouts in the city of Sirte, after heavy fighting that left dozens dead and wounded.
The battle for IS's North African stronghold was launched more than three months ago by forces loyal to the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord.
Those forces have been backed by US air raids for almost a month, amid international concern over the group's growing influence in one of IS's few centres of operation outside Syria and Iraq.
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IS overran the Mediterranean hometown of Libya's slain dictator Moamer Kadhafi in mid-2015, sparking fears the jihadists would use it as a springboard for attacks on Europe.
Pro-GNA forces today said they had encircled the jihadists in less than two square kilometres (0.7 square mile) in Sirte, after staging an assault the previous day on its last two IS-held districts.
The anti-IS fighters "seized a little more than half of district number three and 70 per cent of district number one" in the city's downtown seafront area, they said.
At least 34 pro-GNA fighters have been killed and 185 wounded since they began their "final battle" to retake the whole of Sirte yesterday, the hospital for the loyalist forces said.
IS casualty figures were unavailable.
The jihadists had deployed at least 12 suicide car bombs in a last bid to slow the loyalist advance, pro-GNA forces said.
After sporadic clashes during the night, the front was calm on Monday morning, according to an AFP photographer in the city 450 kilometres east of Tripoli.
In June 2015, IS fighters seized Sirte, hoisting their black flag above the city's buildings and roaming its streets to check that men respected prayer times and women did not venture outdoors without a male guardian.
The pro-GNA forces fought their way into Sirte on June 9, but their advance was hampered by snipers, suicide bombings and booby traps.
More than 370 pro-GNA fighters have been killed and nearly 2,000 wounded in the battle for Sirte since May, according to medical sources.
Loyalist forces are mostly militias from western cities backing the unity government of premier-designate Fayez al-Sarraj and the guards of oil installations that IS has repeatedly tried to seize.
Backed by US air strikes since August 1, they managed to seize the jihadists' headquarters at the Ouagadougou conference centre on August 10, pinning down IS fighters near the sea.
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