Europe courts Libyan strongman as Russia closes in - News Summed Up

Europe courts Libyan strongman as Russia closes in


We are going to shake their hands. We will align with them,” Haftar said in an interview on Sunday.Last week, Italy signed a €200 million memorandum of understanding with the GNA before EU leaders signed an agreement which seeks to stop asylum seekers reaching Europe by stopping them at sea and sending them back to detention centres in Libya.The EU’s urgency to strike deals with Libya and use its soft power could be fuelled by fears of Russian attempts to set foot in Libya by arming Haftar.The general made several trips to Moscow last year and last month he visited a Russian aircraft carrier off the coast of Tobruk from where he held a video conference with Russian defence minister Sergey Shoigu. In the wake of the visit, Italian State TV reported that Haftar signed an agreement which would see Moscow building two military bases near Tobruk and Benghazi.Russian state media did not mention the agreement, but confirmed that Russia would get a foothold in the south of the Mediterranean. The move would also step up the foreign presence in the Eastern part of Libya, where Emirati and French air forces have been reportedly operating since March from the Al-Khadim Airport in the city of Marj, Haftar’s headquarters.Speaking to MaltaToday last month, foreign minister George Vella expressed his hope that Russia abides by the UN embargo on the sale of weapons to Libya but Russian news reports said Haftar may have submitted a “wish list” of weapons if the arms embargo applying to all parties in Libya except the GNA government was lifted.Rival factions wrestling for territorial control in the oil-rich country are plunging the country into further chaos, as the Tripoli-based GNA led by Fayez Al-Serraj struggles to bring stability to its people.Haftar refuses to acknowledge the political authority of the GNA and has engaged in a power struggle with Tripoli that has strongly weakened prospects for a unification of the country. The future of the GNA hangs in the balance and the success of the UN-brokered deal depends on Haftar’s next moves and the extent of Russia’s involvement in Libya.A Russian foreign ministry spokesperson this week said that the GNA has been in power for a year “but the situation has not changed for the better.”The spokesperson said that the priority goals of the transitional period, stipulated by the UN-deal, “have not been reached: the work on the draft constitution has not been completed, and general elections, following which permanent bodies of state authority should have been formed, have not been held.”While pointing out that Libyans “should decide the fate of their country,” and criticising the imposition of the GNA, Russia looks at Haftar as a political heavyweight “who exercises a dominant influence on the alignment of political forces in modern-day Libya.”The Russian foreign ministry spokesperson said that Haftar’s forces have played a significant role in defeating Islamists and “terrorists” which has led to the resumption of oil exports.“We believe that the Libyan National Army could be the backbone of the united Libyan armed forces,” the spokesperson said.


Source: Libya Today February 09, 2017 09:00 UTC



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