Arab News

Tunisia offers to mediate in Libya crisis

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TUNIS: Libyan military strongman Khalifa Haftar visited neighborin­g Tunisia on Monday for talks with President Beji Caid Essebsi, who offered to act as a mediator between rival Libyan factions.

Libya, which plunged into chaos after the ouster and killing of dictator Muammar Qaddafi in 2011, has two rival government­s and Parliament­s, as well as several militia groups battling to control its oil wealth.

“The stability of Libya is a necessary condition for the stability of Tunisia,” Essebsi said, calling on Libyans to “overcome their difference­s” and “to work to build a state.”

In a statement, he said Tunisia did not want to “interfere in Libya’s internal affairs” but rather to “facilitate dialogue between the different components of the Libyan people.”

Libya’s Government of National Unity, based in the capital Tripoli, is backed by the UN but has struggled to assert its influence across the country.

The head of a rival government, backed by Haftar’s self-proclaimed Libyan National Army, which controls much of the country’s east and south, on Sunday urged the internatio­nal community to recognize his administra­tion.

Essebsi’s office said on Monday Haftar had expressed his “gratitude to the Tunisian president for his continuing efforts to reach a settlement.”

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