Kuwait Times

Greece ‘wants a say’ in Libya peace process: PM

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ATHENS: Greece wants to be included in UN-sponsored talks in January on the Libya conflict, Prime Minister Kyriakos

Mitsotakis said yesterday, as tensions escalate with neighbours Turkey over the issue. Libya has become another diplomatic front for Greece and Turkey as the traditiona­l rivals jostle over Mediterran­ean maritime rights and the competing camps in the North African country’s conflict.

“We do not want a source of instabilit­y in our neighbourh­ood. Therefore we want a say in developmen­ts in Libya,” Mitsotakis told To Vima weekly in an interview. “We want to be part of the solution in Libya, as it concerns us too,” he said. The UN has said an internatio­nal conference will be held next month in Berlin to pave the way for a political solution to Libya’s ongoing conflict.

Libya has been beset by chaos since a NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, with rival administra­tions in the east and the west vying for power. “I have requested, and will do so again with greater insistence, that we participat­e in the Berlin process,” Mitsotakis said.

In November, Ankara signed a contentiou­s maritime and military deal with the embattled UN-recognized government in Tripoli. Greece immediatel­y rejected it as baseless, arguing that Turkey and Libya share no maritime border. “(Libya) is our natural maritime neighbor, not Turkey’s,” Mitsotakis said yesterday. The Turkish deal lays claim to much of the Mediterran­ean for energy exploratio­n, conflictin­g with rival claims by Greece and Cyprus.

At the same time, Turkey is stepping up military aid to Tripoli, which is battling the forces of military strongman Khalifa Haftar for control of the capital.

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