U.N.
envoy confident Libya factions can seal deal around September 10
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[August 27, 2015]
PARIS (Reuters) - The United Nations
special envoy to Libya said he was optimistic that the country's two
parliaments will be ready to agree on forming a unity government by
mid-September, a vital step towards ending the political crisis and
military conflict.
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The United Nations has been trying to persuade the country's
warring factions for months to form a unity cabinet and end fighting
across the country four years after the ousting of Muammar Gaddafi.
Militant groups allied to each of the two administrations have
brought the country's oil-dependent economy to its knees, and most
of Libya is lawless and run by armed groups attached to neither
government.
"I continue to believe that around Sept. 10 we will be in a position
to have a final agreement," Bernardino Leon told France 24 in an
interview aired late on Wednesday.
Leon is scheduled to hold a new round of talks in Morocco on
Thursday to push the factions to agree on a deal, but the parliament
based in Tripoli has so far refused to sign it.
The elected House of Representatives, based in the east with the
official government which fled Tripoli a year ago, signed a
preliminary deal last month, but the head of the Tripoli delegation
quit the talks on Wednesday. [ID: nL5N1114I4]
Both sides face divisions and pressure from hardliners.
"There are important questions (remaining) for all parties, but I
think we have never been as close as we are now, and it would be
tragic that at a time when Libya is so close and the positions of
both sides are so close that we are not able to conclude this
accord."
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The U.N. proposal calls for a one-year unity government in which a
council of ministers headed by a prime minister and two deputies
would have executive authority.
Libya's security has rapidly deteriorated as Islamic State and other
armed groups not linked to either government exploit the power
vacuum.
"The priority is to conclude a political accord. Libya's main weapon
against Islamic State is unity," Leon said, when asked whether there
should be an international intervention to fight the group.
(Reporting by John Irish; Editing by Dominic Evans)
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