Bin Jawad District , ( Arabic : جالو , Baladiyah Bin Jawwad) was one of the districts ( baladiyah ) of Libya from 1983 to 1987. It lay in the northern part of the country bordering the Gulf of Sidra . Its capital was Bin Jawad . Under Italy it was in Misrata Province. Before being made a baladiyah in 1983, it was part of the governorate system . In 1987 the area was incorporated into Sirte District and has remained there since.
5-572: The settlements in Bin Jawad District were: Nofaliya , Sidra , Bin Jawad , and Ra's Lanuf . From west to east following the coast from Sirte there are the towns Sultan , Harawa , Uwayja , Nofaliya , Bin Jawad , Sidra , Ra's Lanuf . The next settlements in the east are Qaryat Bishr and Brega . Bin Jawad 30°46′N 18°03′E / 30.767°N 18.050°E / 30.767; 18.050 This Libya location article
10-515: Is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Nofaliya Nofaliya or Nawfaliya ( Arabic : النوفلية Nawfalīyah ) is a town in the desert in the Sirte District of Libya . It is west of Libya's major oil ports. It is located in the former Bin Jawad District , around 20 km west of Bin Jawad and 15 km south east of ‘Uwayja . During World War II Nofaliya was
15-545: The Libyan National Army (LNA) and various militias. In February 2015, the town was taken over by the ISIL. A convoy of forty heavily armed vehicles arrived from Sirte and ordered Nofaliya's residents to "repent" and pledge allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi . The fighters appointed Ali Al-Qarqaa as "emir" of the town. Nofaliya was briefly retaken by New General National Congress forces on 19 March 2015, but they withdrew
20-730: The next day. The LNA took the town, but ISIL regained the town from the LNA the following week. It was not until the Bunyan Marsous offensive in Spring of 2016 that pro-government forces retook the city on 31 May 2016. However, in December 2016 militia forces, believed to be units of the Benghazi Defence Brigades , attempted to take over Nofaliya, driving off the NGNC forces, but were in turn driven out
25-688: The site of a brief skirmish in late 1942 when some of Erwin Rommel 's retreating forces ran out of fuel. At the time it was home to a small fort with a few Italian buildings in addition to a mosque, some shops and a school. During the Second Libyan Civil War , Nofaliya was fought over by the New General National Congress forces (NGNC), the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL);
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