The Borneo Post

Germany pushes Haftar to join Libya peace talks

-

BERLIN: Germany’s foreign minister headed to Libya on Thursday to persuade strongman Khalifa Haftar to join an internatio­nal conference on the conflict, as the UN urged support for the peace initiative.

Heiko Maas said the Berlin conference — scheduled for Sunday — was ‘ the best chance in a long time’ for peace talks in Libya, which has been in chaos since the 2011 uprising that killed longtime leader Muammar

Gaddafi.

Maas was due to meet Haftar in the eastern city of Benghazi — one of the general’s stronghold­s —days after meeting his rival Fayez al-Sarraj, who serves as head of the UN-recognised government in Tripoli.

Sarraj’s government has been under attack since April from forces loyal to Haftar, with clashes killing more than 280 civilians and 2,000 fighters and displacing tens of thousands more.

“I hope that the parties will use this chance to take Libya’s future back into Libyan hands,” Maas said in Berlin before boarding his flight.

“For that, we need readiness for a real ceasefire and the participat­ion of both warring parties in the dialogue format suggested by the United Nations.” The leaders of the warring groups were in Moscow early this week at talks aimed at finalising a ceasefire orchestrat­ed by Russia and Turkey.

But Haftar walked away without signing the permanent truce, sparking fears about the shaky ceasefire.

In his report to the UN Security Council late on Wednesday, UN chief Antonio Guterres urged all warring parties to stop fighting and “engage constructi­vely towards that end, including within the Berlin process”. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia