France, Turkey lock horns over Libya
Tensions are brewing between France and Libya after the latter accused the former of fomenting the crisis in Libya.
The Élysée Palace
expressed anger, meanwhile, at the practices of Turkish President Recep Tayyip
Erdoğan in Libya.
French President
Emmanuel Macron accused Erdoğan of failing to honor the pledges he made during
the Berlin Conference in January this year on maintaining a truce in Libya.
Following his meeting
with Greek Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis in Paris, Macron added that his
country is concerned over Turkish conduct in Libya.
He said this conduct
contradicts the pledges Erdoğan made during the conference in Berlin.
"We saw Turkish
ships ferrying Syrian mercenaries to Libya in the past days, in a blatant
violation of agreements made during the Berlin conference," Macron said.
Macron's remarks came
shortly after Turkey deployed troops in Tripoli Port on June 10.
The troops arrived to
the Libyan port on board of two Turkish warships, which is unprecedented since
Turkey started sending mercenaries to aid the Tripoli-based Government of
National Accord (GNA) in Libya.
On June 15, France
said it would hold talks with its NATO partners on Ankara's hostile role in
Libya.
It accused Turkey of
hampering a truce in Libya and violating a United Nations arms embargo on the
country.
France also called on
NATO to take action against Turkish violations in Libya.
Turkish
response
Turkey countered by
blaming France and accusing it of causing unrest in Libya.
The Turkish Foreign
Ministry even accused Paris of being the principal force behind the crises in
Libya since 2011.
Political science
professor at Cairo University Mohamed Hussein expected France to escalate its
action against Turkey in the coming period.
This is especially
true against the background of the aggressive conduct of Turkey in Libya, he
told The Reference.




