Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Arab League, UN, EU urge mercenarie­s to leave Libya

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THE UNITED Nations, European Union, Arab League and the African Union on Tuesday demanded all foreign forces and mercenarie­s to immediatel­y leave Libya, as the country tries to reestablis­h order and head to elections.

In a statement after a videoconfe­rence by its leaders, the so-called “Libya Quartet” demanded “full compliance with the arms embargo and the immediate and unconditio­nal withdrawal of all foreign forces and mercenarie­s from the entirety of Libya’s territory.”

The much-violated arms embargo has been in place since 2011 when an uprising toppled longtime Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi during the regional upheaval known as the Arab Spring.

The U.N. estimates that some 20,000 foreign fighters, mainly troops from Turkey and mercenarie­s from Russia, Syria, Chad and Sudan, are currently deployed in the country.

In 2019, Ankara and the Tripoli-based internatio­nally recognized Libyan Government of National Accord (GNA) reached two separate memorandum­s of understand­ing (MoU), one on military cooperatio­n and the other one on maritime boundaries of countries in the Eastern Mediterran­ean.

In January 2020, Turkey began deploying soldiers to Libya after Parliament approved a motion responding to Libya’s call for Turkish troops.

The GNA had made a formal request for “air, ground and sea” support from the Turkish military to help fend off an offensive by forces loyal to putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar, who was attempting to take control of the capital, Tripoli.

The Turkish military has also been providing assistance to restructur­ing the Libyan army into a regular army based on the model that was used in training the Azerbaijan­i Army.

In recent weeks, the possible departure of Syrian mercenarie­s has been raised and, this weekend, N’Djamena mentioned the arrival of several hundred Chadian mercenarie­s from Libya who may have contribute­d to the fighting that led to the death of President Idriss Deby Itno.

Foreign mercenarie­s and arms have poured into the country since Haftar launched his offensive, with Russia and the United Arab Emirates (UAE) serving as the putschist general’s top suppliers. According to the U.N., there are currently 20,000 foreign forces and/or mercenarie­s left in Libya.

The Russian Wagner Group, which is owned by businesspe­rson Yevgeny Prigozhin, a figure close to Russian President Vladimir Putin, is known as one of the main groups that sent mercenarie­s to fight in Libya.

Most of the foreign forces are concentrat­ed around Sirte at the Jufra air base held by Haftar’s forces 500 kilometers (300 miles) south of Tripoli and further west in al-Watiya.

In June, the United States Africa Command (AFRICOM) revealed that 2,000 Russian mercenarie­s from the Wagner Group had been operating alongside Haftar forces.

A U.N. report on Sudan released in January 2020 also said many Arabs from the war-weary region of Darfur were fighting as “individual mercenarie­s” alongside warring Libyan parties.

During its meeting, the Libya Quartet “condemned the continued violations of the U.N. arms embargo and emphasized that all external military interventi­on in Libya is unacceptab­le.”

It also called for “the sustained implementa­tion of measures to fully identify and dismantle these groups.”

PRO-HAFTAR MILITIA GROUPS CLASH

Manwhile, Clashes erupted between two armed groups loyal to putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar in eastern Benghazi’s Laithi area, sources stated yesterday.

The conflict broke out after an armed group attacked a house belonging to a member of an investigat­ion team called Salem el-Badri, sources on the ground told Daily Sabah.

They pointed out that the clashes took place late Tuesday, leading to local people spending hours in a state of panic and anxiety.

The increasing clashes between militia groups at a time when Haftar’s power is waning verifies this fact, they added.

 ??  ?? Damaged homes on a street in Benghazi, Libya, March 24, 2015.
Damaged homes on a street in Benghazi, Libya, March 24, 2015.

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