While the world is gripped by the coronavirus pandemic, war-shattered Libya marks one year Saturday of its latest bloody conflict that is plunging it ever deeper into chaos.

Russia, Turkey, the United Arab Emirates and others have fuelled the fighting in the oil-rich but poverty-stricken North African nation where hundreds have been killed and over 150,000 displaced.

As much of the world has hunkered down amid the pandemic, militias in the south of the capital Tripoli have kept fighting
As much of the world has hunkered down amid the pandemic, militias in the south of the capital Tripoli have kept fighting AFP / -

Medical experts warn that Libya is at heightened risk of the fast-spreading COVID-19 illness, given the deteriorated public health system in the gateway country for desperate Europe-bound migrants.

As much of the world has hunkered down, militias in the south of the capital Tripoli have kept firing bullets, mortars and grenades at each other, the explosions echoing across the city.

A Tripoli house after a rocket attack in February by forces loyal to eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar
A Tripoli house after a rocket attack in February by forces loyal to eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar AFP / Mahmud TURKIA

Libya has been gripped by chaos for almost a decade, since longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi was brought down and killed in a 2011 uprising backed by several Western powers.

It is now split between the UN-recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) in Tripoli and forces loyal to eastern-based strongman Khalifa Haftar, who launched his offensive to try to capture the capital on April 4 last year.

One year on, and several failed ceasefires later, "we are simply witnessing the decimation of a nation", said analyst Jalel Harchaoui of the Clingendael Institute in The Hague.

Fighters of a military battalion loyal to Libya's Khalifa Haftar patrol in the eastern city of Benghazi during a state of emergency to combat the coronavirus disease
Fighters of a military battalion loyal to Libya's Khalifa Haftar patrol in the eastern city of Benghazi during a state of emergency to combat the coronavirus disease AFP / Abdullah DOMA

The United Nations' envoy to Libya, Ghassan Salame, threw in the towel in early March following the repeated failure of efforts to restore order, although he said his resignation was for health reasons.

A Berlin summit in late January saw Moscow, Ankara and other foreign players engaged in Libya pledge to respect an arms embargo and support a truce.

Supporters of Libyan military strongman Khalifa Haftar demonstrate in February against the Turkish military intervention in support of the Tripoli government
Supporters of Libyan military strongman Khalifa Haftar demonstrate in February against the Turkish military intervention in support of the Tripoli government AFP / Abdullah DOMA

But barely 10 days later, Salame was denouncing violations and a continuous influx of foreign arms and mercenaries.

Libya's UN-recognised Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj (C) presided over a cabinet meeting where the implementation of a military deal with Turkey was 'unanimously approved'
Libya's UN-recognised Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj (C) presided over a cabinet meeting where the implementation of a military deal with Turkey was 'unanimously approved' AFP / -

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has openly sent military equipment and fighters to the GNA.

Russia, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates have meanwhile supported what Haftar claims is a campaign against jihadist "terrorists" and "criminals".

The Spanish NGO Maydayterraneo rescues migrants off the Libyan coast in February
The Spanish NGO Maydayterraneo rescues migrants off the Libyan coast in February AFP / Pablo Garcia

As Haftar's offensive has so far failed to take Tripoli, said Harchaoui, Erdogan's government has been able "to increase its presence and influence in the Libyan capital".

In recent months, Erdogan sent hundreds of pro-Turkish Syrian fighters to battle the pro-Haftar forces, who are supported by Russian mercenaries Moscow denies having sent.

Armed groups from western Libya are fighting Haftar forces "in an existential battle", said Wolfram Lacher of the German Institute for International and Security Affairs.

Libya has confirmed just a handful of coronavirus cases but the UN warns it is at high risk because of insecurity, a weak health system and a high numbers of migrants, refugees and internally displaced persons
Libya has confirmed just a handful of coronavirus cases but the UN warns it is at high risk because of insecurity, a weak health system and a high numbers of migrants, refugees and internally displaced persons AFP / Mahmud TURKIA

"Haftar's forces are notorious for looting and summary executions, and they include groups that are motivated by a thirst for revenge against entire communities," he said.

"The fear of war crimes, of collective punishment, of marginalisation under dictatorial rule means that the forces fighting against Haftar won't give up easily."

Fighting has intensified in recent days, despite the latest pledges by both sides to accept UN and international calls for a humanitarian truce to help contain the coronavirus.

The international community's "distraction linked to COVID-19 has accelerated and exacerbated this escalation which, in any case, was inevitable," said Harchaoui.

Libya has confirmed just a handful of cases so far, but the UN aid agency OCHA has warned it is "at high risk of the spread of COVID-19 given its levels of insecurity, weak health system and high numbers of migrants, refugees and internally displaced persons".

A few days ago, the GNA even announced a counter-offensive paradoxically named "peace storm".

Fighting is still concentrated south of Tripoli and east of the coastal city of Misrata, after pro-Haftar forces in early January captured Sirte, some 250 kilometres (150 miles) away.

Fears of war and disease have piled on misery for the displaced, such as Fatma Khairi, who has taken refuge in a school building in the working class district of Abu Slim, in the south of Tripoli.

"I have a lot of trouble with the communal toilets where often there is no water or soap," she told AFP.

"My family and I live in dramatic conditions that I can hardly describe to you. The situation has become unbearable."

The humanitarian situation is likely to deteriorate as the world faces a deep economic crisis and a further slump in the price of oil, Libya's main source of income.

Pro-Haftar forces have already shuttered the country's main oil fields and production has come to a virtual standstill.

A political resolution to the conflict seems remote, said both Lacher and Harchaoui, who agreed that the international community would have to pressure the outside powers, especially the United Arab Emirates.

"If no Western state agrees to contradict the UAE even a little, an even more serious deterioration of the conflict will be inevitable," said Harchaoui.

Lacher judged that for now "Western states are not ready to exert meaningful pressure on Haftar and the UAE. As long as this is the case, the prospects for a political solution are virtually non-existent."