Italy's Salvini says France has no
interest in stabilizing Libya
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[January 22, 2019]
By Crispian Balmer
ROME (Reuters) - Deputy Prime Minister
Matteo Salvini, continuing a war of words between Rome and Paris, said
on Tuesday that France was not looking to bring calm to violence-ravaged
Libya because its energy interests there rivaled those of Italy.
Relations between Italy and France, traditionally close allies, have
grown frosty since the far-right League and anti-establishment 5-Star
Movement formed a coalition last year and took aim at pro-EU French
President Emmanuel Macron.
France's Foreign Ministry and the French president's office declined to
respond immediately.
On Monday France summoned Italy's ambassador after Salvini's fellow
deputy prime minister, Luigi Di Maio, accused Paris of creating poverty
in Africa and generating mass migration to Europe.
Salvini backed up Di Maio, saying France was looking to extract wealth
from Africa rather than helping countries develop their own economies,
and pointed particularly to Libya, which has been in turmoil since a
NATO-backed uprising in 2011 that overthrew strongman Muammar Gaddafi.
"In Libya, France has no interest in stabilizing the situation, probably
because it has oil interests that are opposed to those of Italy,"
Salvini told Canale 5 TV station.
A French diplomatic source said it was not the first time that Salvini
had made such comments and that it was probably because he felt he had
been upstaged by Di Maio.
The source added that the accusation was baseless and reiterated that
French efforts in Libya were aimed at stabilizing the country,
preventing the spread of terrorism and curbing the migration flows.
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Interior Minister Matteo Salvini attends a news conference after a
cabinet meeting at Chigi Palace in Rome, Italy, October 20 2018.
REUTERS/Remo Casilli/File Photo
Italy's Eni and France's Total have separate joint ventures in
Libya, but Eni's CEO Claudio Descalzi denied in a newspaper
interview last year that there was any conflict between the two
firms in the north African state.
Salvini is head of the League, while Di Maio leads 5-Star. Both are
campaigning hard for European parliamentary elections in May and are
eager to show they have broken with the consensual politics of
center-left and center-right parties.
The two men have repeatedly targeted neighboring France and accused
Macron of doing nothing to help handle the hundreds of thousands of
mainly African migrants who have reached Italy from Libya in recent
years.
Asked about the latest diplomatic spat with Paris, Salvini said on
Tuesday: "France has no reason to get upset because it pushed away
tens of thousands of migrants (at the French border), abandoning
them there as though they were beasts. We won't take any lessons on
humanity from Macron."
(Additional reporting by Giuseppe Fonte in Rome and John Irish in
Paris; Editing by Jon Boyle)
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