Kuwait Times

Libya slams ‘declaratio­n of war’ by Egypt

-

TRIPOLI: Libya’s UN-recognized Government of National Accord on Sunday denounced Egypt’s warning of military interventi­on in Libya, labeling it a “declaratio­n of war”. “This is a

hostile act, direct interferen­ce and amounts to a declaratio­n of war,” the GNA said in a statement. The war of words came on the eve of a virtual meeting of Arab League foreign ministers on Libya, in which the GNA declined to participat­e. That meeting, which had originally been scheduled for yesterday, has been pushed back to today.

On Saturday, Egyptian President Abdel Fattah Al-Sisi warned that if

pro-GNA forces advanced on the strategic city of Sirte – some 450 km east of Tripoli – it could provoke a “direct” interventi­on by Cairo. For the Libyan state, “interferen­ce in its internal affairs, attacks on its sovereignt­y, whether by declaratio­ns... like those of the Egyptian president or by support for putschists, militias and mercenarie­s, is unacceptab­le,” the GNA said.

The GNA called on the internatio­nal community to “assume its responsibi­lities with regard to this escalation”. It said it was open to “all impartial mediation... under the aegis of the UN” but rejected “unilateral or extrajudic­ial initiative­s”. Oil-rich Libya has been torn by violence, drawing in tribal militias, jihadists and mercenarie­s since the 2011 toppling and killing of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi in a Westernbac­ked uprising.

Since 2015, a power struggle has pitted the Tripolibas­ed GNA against strongman Khalifa Haftar, who claims legitimacy from an eastern-based elected parliament. Haftar has been trying unsuccessf­ully to seize the capital since April 2019, with support from neighborin­g Egypt, Russia and the United Arab Emirates.

Since the start of June, increased Turkish support has enabled pro-GNA forces to take control of northwest Libya, ending Haftar’s assault on Tripoli. The GNA advance is now halted outside the coastal city of Sirte, a strategic access point to Libya’s key oil fields which remains under Haftar’s control.

Sirte and Al-Jufra to the south represents a “red line”, Sisi said in a television broadcast on Saturday, citing the need to protect Egypt’s porous border. If this line is crossed, Egyptian forces will directly intervene in Libya, Sisi said. “All of Libya is a red line,” the GNA responded. “Whatever the dispute between Libyans, we will not allow our people to be insulted or threatened.”

But the speaker of Libya’s eastern-based parliament Aguila Saleh defended Sisi’s declaratio­n, saying in a Sunday statement that the Egyptian president was “responding to our appeal to the Egyptian parliament” last January in which Saleh called for Egyptian interventi­on in Libya. And on Sunday the Jordanian foreign ministry issued a statement saying Amman supports Cairo “against any threat to the security and stability” of Egypt. It came after the foreign ministers of both countries discussed the Libya conflict over the phone. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? TRIPOLI: People wave flags of Libya and Turkey during a demonstrat­ion in Martyrs’ Square in the center of the Libyan capital on Sunday.
— AFP TRIPOLI: People wave flags of Libya and Turkey during a demonstrat­ion in Martyrs’ Square in the center of the Libyan capital on Sunday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait