Times of Oman

French foreign minister in Libya to push peace deal

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TRIPOLI: France’s Foreign Minister Jean Yves Le Drian was in Libya on Monday to meet rival political leaders and offer support for a deal aimed at stabilisin­g the strifetorn North African country.

Libyan Prime Minister Fayez Al Seraj and the divided nation’s eastern commander Khalifa Haftar signed an agreement in Paris in July committing them to a conditiona­l ceasefire and to work towards elections in 2018.

The deal did not include other key factions.

Western government­s, worried about extremist militants and smugglers thriving in Libya’s chaos, are pushing a broader U.N.backed deal to unify Libya and end the instabilit­y that has weakened the country since the 2011 fall of Muammar Gaddafi.

In Tripoli, Le Drian met Seraj and planned to hold talks with Abdulrahma­n Swehli, a politician connected to some of Haftar’s rivals who heads a parliament­ary council in the capital, Libyan officials said. Le Drian was also to visit Misrata, Swehli’s home city and a base of opposition to Haftar, before heading to Benghazi to meet Haftar and to Tobruk to meet the head of an eastern-based parliament aligned with him.

“The minister wants to consolidat­e this agreement by getting the parties not invited in July to sup- port it,” said a French diplomatic source. “He wants to ensure that everyone is playing the game and lay the groundwork for elections.”

The French minister’s visit is in line with President Emmanuel Macron’s push for a deeper French role in bringing Libyan factions together in the hope of countering militant violence and easing Europe’s migrant crisis.

“Our objective is the stabilisat­ion of Libya in the interests of the Libyans themselves,” Le Drian said in a statement in Tripoli.

“A united Libya, equipped with functionin­g institutio­ns, is the condition for avoiding the terrorist threat in the long term.”

He said the Paris deal was meant to support the U.N.-backed accord for a government of national unity. Le Drian met U.N. special envoy Ghassan Salame on Sunday. The French diplomatic source said the visit would fit into efforts by Salame to announce a road map to elections during the coming U.N. General Assembly.

 ?? — Reuters ?? SEEKING TO BREAK IMPASSE: French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, left, speaks during a news conference at the headquarte­rs of the prime minister’s office in Tripoli, Libya on Monday.
— Reuters SEEKING TO BREAK IMPASSE: French Foreign Affairs Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian, left, speaks during a news conference at the headquarte­rs of the prime minister’s office in Tripoli, Libya on Monday.

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