Serbian prime minister Aleksandar Vučić says Americans apparently ‘were not aware that foreign citizens’ were being held at Isis camp

This article is more than 4 years old

This article is more than 4 years old

Two Serbian embassy staffers who had been held hostage since November died in Friday’s US airstrikes on an Islamic State camp in western Libya that killed dozens, Serbian officials said on Saturday.

Prime minister Aleksandar Vučić said there was no doubt that Sladjana Stanković, a communications officer, and Jovica Stepić, a driver, were killed in the American bombing. They were taken hostage in November after their diplomatic convoy, including the ambassador, came under fire near the coastal Libyan city of Sabratha.

“Apparently, the Americans were not aware that foreign citizens were being kept there,” Vučić told reporters.

Speaking at a news conference in Belgrade earlier, foreign minister Ivica Dačić said information about the deaths was given to Serbia by foreign officials but had not been confirmed by the Libyan government.

“We got the information, including photos, which clearly show that this is most probably true,” Dačić said.

On Friday, American F-15E fighter-bombers struck an Isis training camp in rural Libya near the Tunisian border, killing dozens, probably including an Isis operative considered responsible for deadly attacks in Tunisia last year, US and local officials said.

US airstrikes target Islamic State militants in Libya Read more

Dačić said Serbia had known where the hostages were and had been working to get them back, adding that Libyan troops were considering an operation to free them.

“I believe we had been close to the solution for them to be freed. Unfortunately, as a consequence of the attack against Isis in Libya, the two of them lost their lives,” Dacic said.

“We will seek official explanation from both Libya and the United States about the available facts and the selection of targets.”

He said, according to the information received by the Serbian security services, a criminal group believed to be linked to Isis had demanded ransom for the hostages, whom they were holding at the site that was bombed.

“On the other hand, the American administration said it was an [Isis] training camp,” Dacic said. “This is information that has to be checked.”

He did not specify the amount of ransom demanded of the families, saying only it was “impossible to pay”.

“It wasn’t in the interests of the people who held them to kill them, because there were no other demands but financial,” Dacic said.

A Libyan armed group calling itself the special deterrent forces announced on Facebook that the two bodies had been delivered to Tripoli’s Mitiga Airport. The group posted pictures showing two green coffins inside a hearse, and another photo of one of the coffins sitting on a tarmac next to a small plane.

The special deterrent forces are loyal to the militia-backed government that now controls Tripoli. The group’s posting did not indicate when the bodies would be flown to Serbia.

In November, gunmen in Libya crashed into a convoy of vehicles taking Serbia’s ambassador to neighboring Tunisia and then kidnapped the two embassy employees. Serbian ambassador Oliver Potezica escaped unharmed along with his wife and two sons.

“The attack happened when one of the embassy cars was hit from behind. When the driver came out to check what happened, he was dragged into one of the attackers’ cars,” Potezica told Tanjug news agency at the time.

Five years after Gaddafi, Libya torn by civil war and battles with Isis Read more

Since the 2011 overthrow of Libya’s longtime autocratic ruler Muammar Gaddafi, the North African nation has fractured into warring camps backed by a loose array of militias, former rebels and tribes.

Libya’s internationally recognized government has been forced out of the capital, Tripoli, and now operates out of the eastern cities of Tobruk and Bayda. Another government, backed by Islamist-affiliated militias known as Libya Dawn, controls Tripoli and much of western Libya. United Nations-brokered efforts to form a unity government continue to falter.

The chaos has provided fertile ground for Islamic extremist groups such as al-Qaida and Isis to flourish.