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Libya threatens to bomb North Korean

The North Korean-flagged tanker docked at Es Sider. Photograph: Esam Omran Al-Fetori/Reuters


Libya has threatened to bomb a North Korean-flagged tanker if it tries to ship oil from a rebel-controlled port, in a serious escalation of a standoff over the country's petroleum wealth.


The rebels, who have seized three major Libyan ports since August to press their demands for more autonomy, warned Tripoli against staging an attack to halt the oil sale after the tanker docked at Es Sider terminal, one of the country's biggest. The vessel started loading crude late at night, oil officials said.


The government is struggling to control militias that helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but kept their weapons and now challenge state authority.


A local television station controlled by protesters showed footage of pro-autonomy rebels holding a lengthy ceremony and slaughtering a camel to celebrate their first oil shipment. In the distance stood a tanker. The station said the ceremony took place in Es Sider.


Prime minister Ali Zeidan appeared on television to warn the tanker's crew. 'The tanker will be bombed if it doesn't follow orders when leaving [the port]. This will be an environmental disaster.'


He denounced the attempt to load oil as a criminal act. Authorities have ordered the arrest of the tanker's crew.


There was no immediate sign of the country's armed forces moving toward the port. Analysts say the military, still in training, would struggle to overcome rebels battle-hardened from the eight-month uprising against Gaddafi.


Zeidan acknowledged the army had failed to implement his orders last week to stop the protesters sending reinforcements from their base in Ajdabiyah, west of the regional capital Benghazi, to Es Sider.


'Nothing was done,' Zeidan said, adding that political opponents in parliament were obstructing his government. He said North Korea had asked the ship's captain to sail away from the port but armed protesters had prevented that.


Abb-Rabbo Albarassi, the eastern autonomy movement's self-declared prime minister, said Zeidan's government had failed to meet its demands to share oil wealth, to investigate oil corruption and to grant regional autonomy.


'We tried to reach a deal with the government, but they and parliament ... were too busy with themselves and didn't even discuss our demands,' he said at the televised ceremony. 'If anyone attacks, we will respond to that.'


A successful independent oil shipment would be a blow to the government. Tripoli had said earlier it would destroy tankers trying to buy oil from Ibrahim Jathran, a former anti-Gaddafi rebel who seized the port and two others with thousands of his men in August.


Jathran, who was seen attending the televised ceremony, had commanded a brigade of former rebels paid by the state to protect petroleum facilities. He defected with his troops, however, to take over the ports.


In January, the Libyan navy fired on a Maltese-flagged tanker that it said had tried to load oil from the protesters in Es Sider.


The North Korean-flagged Morning Glory, which was previously flagged in Liberia, had been circling off the Libyan coast for days. It tried to dock at Es Sider on Tuesday, when port workers still loyal to the central government told the crew to turn back.


Storage tanks at Es Sider and other seized ports are full, according to oil sources.


It is extremely unusual for an oil tanker flagged in secretive North Korea to operate in the Mediterranean, shipping sources said.


A spokesman for the state-run National Oil Corp (NOC) said the Morning Glory was owned by a Saudi company. It had changed ownership in the past few weeks and previously been called Gulf Glory, according to a shipping source.


The Saudi embassy in Tripoli said in a statement that the kingdom's government had nothing to do with the tanker, without saying who owned it.


The US ambassador to Libya, Deborah Jones, said in a series of tweets on Saturday that the only parties authorised to sell Libya's oil were the NOC and its subsidiaries and partners.


'Any purchase of oil within Libya from anyone other than those entities amounts to theft from the Libyan people,' she said. Companies that engaged in illicit trade with separatist groups in Libya risked liability in multiple jurisdictions.


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