He said about 40 people had been wounded in the attack and clashes
that followed, and that they were still being brought to the hospital
late on Thursday.
Islamic State militants staged attacks on Thursday between their Libyan stronghold of Sirte and the city of Misrata, killing five people, officials said.
The
jihadist group said it had taken control of several villages in the
area following attacks on checkpoints, though reports that local
security forces had retreated could not immediately be confirmed.
Islamic
State took advantage of Libya's security vacuum and political turmoil
to establish itself in Sirte last year. It controls a strip of coast
about 250 km (155 miles) long around the city, but it has struggled to
hold ground elsewhere in the country.
The West is hoping a U.N.-backed government that arrived in Tripoli at
the end of March will be able to unite Libya's armed factions to take
on Islamic State. But efforts to counter the group have so far depended
on loose alliances of armed brigades that supported rival governments in
Tripoli and the east.
Aziz Issa, the spokesman
for Misrata central hospital, said three members of the local security
forces had been killed in an attack on a checkpoint at Abu Grain, about
140 km (85 miles) west of Sirte.
He said about 40
people had been wounded in the attack and clashes that followed, and
that they were still being brought to the hospital late on Thursday.
Separately,
militants carried out a bomb attack in Baghla, to the south, a local
official and a resident said. The official, from the nearby town of Bani
Walid, said two residents were killed in the bombing.
Islamic
State said in statement that its fighters had gained control over
several villages in the area, including Baghla, Zamzam, and Abu Najaym,
as well as the town of Abu Grain.
The group's
militants regularly venture across the main road leading south from
Misrata, and have carried out raids and attacks in the area before,
including against checkpoints manned by brigades from Misrata.
The attacks on Thursday came as military forces in eastern Libya said they were preparing for a campaign to recapture Sirte.
There
have also been reports that Misrata brigades were mobilising to advance
against Islamic State, and pictures posted on social media last week
showed convoys of dozens of vehicles on the road south from Misrata.
The
U.N.-backed unity government has urged armed factions to hold back from
attacking Sirte until it creates a unified military command.
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