Muscat Daily

‘Libya needs foreign interferen­ce to stop’

UN special envoy Salame spoke on Libyan conflict ahead of a summit of global leaders in Berlin today

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Berlin, Germany - Internatio­nal players must stop meddling in the Libyan conflict, the UN’s special envoy told AFP on Saturday, on the eve of a summit of world powers to try to bring peace to the North African nation.

“All foreign interferen­ce can provide some aspirin effect in the short term, but Libya needs all foreign interferen­ce to stop. That’s one of the objectives of this conference,” Ghassan Salame said in an interview ahead of the Berlin summit.

Leaders of Russia, Turkey and France are due to join talks in Berlin on Sunday under the auspices of the United Nations, which wants to extract a pledge from foreign powers wielding influence in the region to stop meddling in the conflict - be it by supplying weapons, troops or financing.

Both leaders of the warring factions - strongman Khalifa Haftar and the head of Tripoli’s UNrecognis­ed government Fayez al-Sarraj - are also expected at the first gathering of such scale on the conflict since 2018.

Libya has been torn by fighting between rival armed factions since a 2011 NATO-backed uprising killed dictator Moammar Gadhafi and toppled his regime.

More recently, Sarraj’s troops in Tripoli have been under attack since April from Haftar’s forces, with clashes killing more than 280 civilians and 2,000 fighters

Ghassan Salame, Special Representa­tive of the Secretary-General and Head of the United Nations Support Mission in Libya, speaks during an interview on the eve of a peace summit on Libya, in Berlin on Saturday

and displacing tens of thousands.

‘Vicious cycle’

Although Sarraj’s government is recognised by the UN, some powerful players have broken away to stand behind Haftar - turning a domestic conflict into what is essentiall­y a proxy war

with internatio­nal powers jostling to secure their own interests from global influence to oil

and migration.

Alarm grew internatio­nally when Ankara ordered in troops

early January to help shore up Sarraj, while Moscow is suspected of providing weapons, financing and mercenarie­s to Haftar - something Russia has denied.

“We must end this vicious cycle of Libyans calling for the help of foreign powers. Their in

tervention deepens the divisions among the Libyans,” said Salame, noting that the place of internatio­nal players should be to ‘help Libyans develop themselves’.

The UN envoy said Sunday’s meeting will also seek to ‘consolidat­e’ a shaky ceasefire.

“Today we only have a truce.

We want to transform it into a real ceasefire with monitoring, separation (of rival camps), reposition­ing of heavy weapons [outside urban zones],” he said.

The UN had sought on multiple attempts to bid for peace, but talks have repeatedly collapsed.

We must end the vicious cycle of Libyans calling for the help of foreign powers

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(AFP)
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