Battle of Wazzin | ||||||||
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Part of 2011 Nafusa Mountains Campaign | ||||||||
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Belligerents | ||||||||
Armed forces of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya |
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Commanders and leaders | ||||||||
Mustafa Abdul Jalil | Muammar Gaddafi | Fouad Mebazaa | ||||||
Casualties and losses | ||||||||
Unknown (First phase) 3 killed (Second phase)* 11 killed (Third phase) |
15 killed, 14 captured (First phase) 8 killed (Second phase)* 23 killed (Third phase) |
1 civilian wounded Several houses destroyed or damaged |
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*Unconfirmed report that up to 20 people in total had been killed on 28 April |
Tunisian/Anti-Gaddafi rebel victory
1 civilian wounded Several houses destroyed or damaged
The Battle of Wazzin was a conflict during the Libyan Civil War for the Libyan-Tunisian border town of Wazzin. Rebel forces made an initial victory, but it was short lived as Gaddafi's men re-occupied the town, only to lose it again to the rebels.
The battle spilled over into Tunisian territory on several occasions, prompting clashes with the Tunisian military (which had not explicitly taken a side in the battle).
The fighting turned Wazzin into something of a ghost town, valuable only as a strategic location.
In the early days of the war, towns in the Nafusa Mountains quickly joined the uprising against Muammar Gaddafi, but soon came under heavy attack by loyalist forces. Wazzin was initially taken by rebels, but soon fell under the control of loyalists, cutting off this supply line to the rebel-held mountain towns. To relieve the military and humanitarian pressure on their besieged towns, the rebels fought to retake the crossing.
On 21 April, rebel forces assaulted Wazzin but were met with fierce resistance by loyalist soldiers. Their advances were initially slow but eventually they overwhelmed Gaddafi's men, taking the town of Wazzin before swiftly capturing the crossing itself, causing Gaddafi's men to be trapped in between the Tunisian border and the advancing rebels. In the end, 105 loyalist soldiers retreated into Tunisia where they surrendered to Tunisian officials.