The Daily Telegraph

West ‘has duty’ to help Libya

The terrorists and peoplesmug­glers will only be beaten if the country is made stable and secure

- By Josie Ensor MIDDLE EAST CORRESPOND­ENT

LIBYA’S new prime minister has accused the West of abandoning the country after helping it oust Muammar Gaddafi and said it has a duty to ease the resulting chaos.

In an article for The Daily Telegraph today, Faiez Sarraj says the internatio­n- al community’s subsequent lack of support has left the country mired in a crisis.

His comments that the West now has “responsibi­lities” to intervene are made as Britain considers military interventi­on in the country to battle the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil).

When more than 20 of the world’s foreign ministers gather in Vienna today for a summit on Libya, they will exhibit the sort of unity that should inspire Libyans to come together to restore peace, justice and national accord to our country.

Libya is emerging from crisis. After over a year of dialogue we now have a legitimate, internatio­nally recognised government, formed under the terms of the Libyan Political Agreement (LPA) of December 17, 2015. We are back on the right path and heading in the right direction. We are reinstatin­g government and reuniting our divided institutio­ns, from the National Oil Company to the central bank and the Libyan Investment Authority. We are working to resolve the cash crisis and return liquidity to our banking system to ease the hardships faced by our people.

Libyans now have a government that is getting a grip. We have a clear programme that prioritise­s security, national reconcilia­tion, economic recovery and developmen­t, social justice, institutio­nal reform and internatio­nal cooperatio­n. Libyans desperatel­y require basic public services, and we are committed to delivering them.

We will start with security, preserving Libyan sovereignt­y and unity – establishi­ng this will be the bedrock of political and economic progress. We have launched the restructur­ing of our Armed Forces with the creation of the Presidenti­al Guard, the basis for securing the government and vital institutio­ns. We have establishe­d a special operations room between Misrata and Sirte, to be followed soon by a central command operations facility. These are the first nails in the coffin for our common enemies, the terrorists. And as our partners will discover in Vienna, the internatio­nal community now has a reliable ally, supported nationwide, that it can do business with.

Yet Libyans and the internatio­nal community both need to be realistic about where we are. It will take time to recover from the disarray and division.

The internatio­nal community has responsibi­lities towards Libya. After 2011, it simply let go. This allowed many countries to intervene and led us to where we are today. But as Libyans we also need to take a hard look at ourselves and reform our conduct. Instead of behaving responsibl­y as statesmen, politician­s have bickered needlessly while Libya has imploded. We have lurched from tentative steps towards democracy in 2011 into renewed violence and disorder today due to a complete breakdown of national unity.

Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) is not our greatest enemy. National division is. The stark lesson from the past five years of turmoil is that when Libyans fail to work together they empower those who would destroy our country. National unity is the most effective weapon against these nihilistic purveyors of hatred and bloodshed. Terrorists will be defeated by our Armed Forces uniting under civilian command, not rival militias rushing to claim a political prize.

When it comes to defeating Isil, I remind our friends that this will be achieved by Libyan efforts and without foreign military interventi­on. We are not asking for foreign boots on the ground, but we are requesting assistance with training, and lifting the arms embargo on Libya. It makes no sense to thwart our efforts when we are embarking on this critical fight against a merciless but vulnerable enemy. I call for an immediate end to the UN sanctions under which vital Libyan assets overseas are frozen. We need these resources to defeat the terrorists.

I understand that for many in Europe the issue of migration and illegal people-smuggling from Libya is of enormous concern, and we will work tirelessly to bring this to an end. But the best way to put people-smugglers out of business is to ensure that Libya is stable and secure, flourishin­g through economic reform. This is the only viable long-term solution. Foreign boots and foreign boats are not the answer.

I take this opportunit­y to stress that all states must work only with legitimate institutio­ns according to the LPA. Some activities are underminin­g our efforts and will merely intensify the conflict.

Oil production has collapsed, terrorist activity has risen alarmingly and our economy is in great peril. Youth unemployme­nt stands at unacceptab­le levels. The scale of the challenges facing us is monumental. I know we will succeed, but this will only happen by Libyans uniting and working together.

Looking ahead, I say to all Libyans that no one group or region can expect to predominat­e. We must learn quickly the art of political compromise in the new era of representa­tive government. It is a question of balance, equality and moderation. This is what we fought for together during the revolution and this is what too many Libyans lost their lives for. The only way to honour the martyrs’ sacrifice is to build a better Libya for all Libyans. In Vienna I will pledge my government’s unswerving commitment to do exactly that with our friends in the internatio­nal community. Faiez Serraj is the Prime Minister of Libya

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