Libya: Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) reopens October 29 /update 9

Mitiga International Airport (MJI) reopens October 29 following temporary closure; flights to resume within two weeks
Read all related news alert(s):
Libya: Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) to resume flight operations December 12 /update 11
Libya: Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) targeted by airstrikes November 3 /update 10
Libya: Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) targeted again September 15, 16 /update 8
Libya: Runway damage reported at Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) September 14 after indirect fire /update 7
Libya: Mortar rounds fired at Mitiga Airport (MJI) September 6 /update 6
Libya: Flights halted at Tripoli's Mitiga Airport (MJI) September 1 /update 5
Libya: Mortar rounds land near Mitiga Airport (MJI) August 24 /update 4
Libya: Flight operations resume at Mitiga Airport (MJI) after indirect fire attack August 17 /update 3
Libya: Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) targeted again on August 16 /update 2
Libya: Missile attack temporarily suspends flights at Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) August 15 /update 1
Libya: Flights suspended at Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport (MJI) August 7
Event
Mitiga International Airport (MJI) in Tripoli reopened on Tuesday, October 29, after a two month-long closure. The airport was shut down on September 1 after being repeatedly struck by artillery fire and air strikes by the Libyan National Army. According to Libya's transportation minister, flight services are expected to resume within two weeks.
Context
On September 14, runway damage was reported at Tripoli's Mitiga International Airport (MJI) after indirect fire impacted the facility following a Libyan National Army (LNA) airstrike in the area in the morning. MJI has been targeted by air and mortar strikes multiple times in recent months.
The LNA launched an offensive into southern Tripoli on April 4. The advance halted 10-15km south of central Tripoli within a week and frontlines have remained largely static since. Some have moved south, out of the city. The initial offensive also triggered several foreign missions and international organisations to temporarily withdraw or to otherwise consider their international footprint in Libya. Central Tripoli itself remains permissive and conducive to most international operations, providing professional security providers are engaged.
Advice
Individuals traveling to Libya via MJI are advised to monitor the situation and confirm flight statuses and availability.
The security environment in Libya remains complex. Professional security advice and support should be sought prior to travel.
Copyright and Disclaimer
GardaWorld is the owner or licensee of all intellectual property rights in the material presented on this website. All such rights are reserved.
The use of this website and its material is subject to the Terms of Use and accordingly you must not use any content from this website for commercial or other analogous purposes without our consent,
including but not limited to any deep-linking or framing in order to copy, distribute, display or monitor any portion of the website.
If you have any questions or are interested in distributing any content from this website, Contact us for more details.