Arab News

Libyan rivals discuss transition­al mechanism

Turkey violating arms embargo, analyst says after incident at sea

- Arab News

Political rivals in Libya on Monday began a second round of talks on a mechanism to choose a transition­al government that will lead the conflictst­ricken country to elections in December next year, the UN said.

Stephanie Williams, the UN’s acting envoy for Libya, headed the online meeting of the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum, a week after the first round of the talks in Tunisia failed to appoint an executive authority.

The 75-member forum did reach an agreement to hold presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections on Dec. 24, 2021. They also agreed to appoint a volunteer legal committee to work on the “constituti­onal basis for the election.”

The forum takes place amid a heavy internatio­nal push to reach a peaceful settlement to the Libyan conflict.

In a show of support for the UN mission, France, Germany, Italy and the UK on Monday threatened to “take measures” against anyone standing in the way of talks aimed at ending the conflict, without specifying what those measures might be. In a joint statement, the four European countries urged all Libyan parties to “fully implement the cease-fire agreement.”

The appeal came as Turkey prevented German forces that are part of a EU military mission from carrying out a full search of a Turkish cargo ship they suspected was transporti­ng weapons to Libya, both countries confirmed on Monday.

Soldiers from the frigate Hamburg boarded the Turkish freighter, the Rosaline A, but had to abandon their inspection and disembark after Turkey protested to the EU mission, the German Ministry of Defense said.

The frigate was operating in the Mediterran­ean as part of the EU’s Operation Irini.

“The incident between Germany and Turkey at sea is the latest controvers­y in which European countries have tried to enforce an arms embargo on Libya, while Turkey openly and flagrantly violates the embargo by shipping poverty-stricken Syrian rebel recruits, drones, special forces, and electronic warfare technology to Tripoli,” Seth J. Frantzman, the executive director of the Middle East Center for Reporting and Analysis, told Arab News.

“German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas has criticized Turkey and, along with other EU countries, there is talk of sanctions. However, Turkey has in the past avoided sanctions and Ankara tends to use a carrot-and-stick approach with Europe — one day bluffing and blustering and threatenin­g, and then saying it wants talks.”

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