Key players to meet virtually to push for Libya cease-fire
The United Nations and Germany are co-chairing a
ministerial meeting on Monday of world powers and other countries with
interests in Libya’s long-running civil war in hopes of promoting a cease-fire
between its rival governments.
Germany’s deputy U.N. ambassador Günter Sautter said
Friday the virtual meeting is “an important follow-up” to a conference of the
same parties in Berlin on Jan. 19 that approved a 55-point road map to peace in
oil-rich Libya and agreed to respect a much-violated arms embargo, hold off on
military support to the warring parties, and push them to reach a full
cease-fire.
Stephanie Williams, the top U.N. official for Libya,
warned last month that the conflict-torn North African country is at “a
decisive turning point,” with foreign backers of its rival governments pouring
in weapons — in violation of the Berlin agreement — and the misery of its
people compounded by the coronavirus pandemic.
Sautter said Monday’s meeting “comes at a crucial
moment.” He pointed to “some encouraging developments in Libya” including talks
on security, “the long-term agreements on transition, and progress on the
question of oil exports.”
In the years after the 2011 uprising that toppled
longtime autocrat Moammar Gadhafi, Libya has sunk further into turmoil and is
now divided between two rival administrations, based in the country’s east and
west, with an array of fighters and militias — backed by various foreign powers
— allied with each side.
Tensions escalated further when east-based forces,
under commander Khalifa Hifter, launched an offensive in April 2019 trying to
capture the capital, Tripoli. But Hifter’s campaign collapsed in June when
militias backing the U.N.-supported government in Tripoli, with Turkish
support, gained the upper hand.
Hifter is supported by the United Arab Emirates,
Russia, Jordan and Egypt while the Tripoli forces are supported by the wealthy
Gulf state of Qatar and by Turkey, a bitter rival of Egypt and the UAE in a
broader regional struggle over political Islam.
Sautter said Germany hopes participants in Monday’s
meeting — co-chaired by U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres and German
Foreign Minister Heiko Maas — will renew their commitments to the Berlin road
map and its implementation.
“We hope that they will call on the parties to
accelerate efforts to achieve a cease-fire,” Sautter said. “We hope that
continuing blatant violations of the arms embargo will end.”
U.N. experts monitoring sanctions against Libya said
in a report, seen by The Associated Press last month, that the arms embargo was
being violated by both sides and their foreign backers, and remains “totally
ineffective.”
They said 11 companies also violated the arms
embargo, including the Wagner Group, a private Russian security company that
the panel said in May provided between 800 and 1,200 mercenaries to Hifter.
Sautter said Germany also hopes Monday’s meeting
“will strengthen the United Nations as key facilitator of the political
dialogue in Libya.”



