Since the 2011 fall of Muammar al-Qaddafi (Gaddafi), Libya has been in chaos with two governments and different militia groups, including ISIS, vying for control.
A further 33 people were left wounded in the attack, which took place on Jan. 4, as cadets gathered on a parade ground at the Hadaba academy in a southern district of the capital, the health ministry of the U.N.-backed Government of National Accord (GNA) based in Tripoli said on Sunday.
Medical sources at public hospitals in the city said they had struggled to identify many of the bodies due to their acute injuries.
It is the latest in a string of airstrikes and shelling since the Libyan National Army (LNA), led by the anti-Islamist military commander and former general in al-Qaddafi’s army Khalifa Haftar, launched a ground and aerial offensive in April to take Tripoli.
Neither side is yet to provide evidence to support their claims.
Meanwhile, the GNA’s Foreign Ministry called for Haftar and his aides to be referred to the International Criminal Court and tried on charges of committing alleged “crimes against humanity.”
It added that it will be calling for an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting to discuss the alleged crimes.
Violent clashes have escalated in Tripoli in recent weeks after Haftar declared a “final” offensive to seize the capital. It followed Tripoli authorities signing a military and maritime agreement with their ally Turkey calling for the deployment of Turkish troops to Libya. The GNA receives support from Qatar, Turkey, and Italy.
Turkey’s parliament approved a bill on Thursday allowing for the deployment of troops in the country in a bid to protect Ankara’s interests in North Africa and the Mediterranean and to help achieve peace and stability in Libya.
He told CNN Turk on Sunday: “Our soldiers’ duty there is coordination. They will develop the operation center there. Our soldiers are gradually going right now.”
Erdogan also condemned the recent attack in Tripoli and called on the international community to take steps to achieve a ceasefire.
However, there are growing fears that Turkey’s involvement in Libya may serve to escalate fighting within the country.