Turkey prevents Germany from inspecting suspicious ship bound for Libya
 
 
Berlin announced that Ankara had prevented it from
completing a search of a Turkish ship headed to the city of Misrata, which was
suspected of transporting weapons to Libya for militias supporting the
Government of National Accord (GNA).
German website Der Spiegel revealed that Turkey prevented
the German army, which is working within the European Union mission of
Operation Irene to monitor the ban on supplying weapons to Libya, from
examining a suspicious cargo ship at the last moment.
The website stated that the German frigate Hamburg stopped
the Turkish cargo ship Rosaline A on Sunday, 200km north of Benghazi in eastern
Libya, because the EU mission had indications that the ship was carrying
weapons being smuggled to Libya. However, the German soldiers had to leave the
ship and allow it to continue on its way to Misrata.
Over the past months, Turkey has intensified its
interventions in the Libyan file, supporting the GNA against the Libyan
National Army (LNA) with weapons and equipment. Ankara has also sent thousands
of Syrian mercenaries and forced them into battles in the capital, Tripoli.
It is noteworthy that the international community had
stressed during the Berlin Summit in January the need to stop foreign
interference and to continue to prohibit the flow of weapons in order to reach
a solution to the conflict, which has plunged the country into fighting and
termoil since the fall of Muammar Gaddafi's regime.
Libya, which has been mired by chaos for years, began a new
round of dialogue between the conflicting parties under the auspices of the
United Nations, with hopes of reaching an agreement on mechanisms to run for
positions in the Presidential Council and the government in charge of holding
parliamentary elections next December.
The conflict in Libya has been exacerbated by foreign armed
interventions, as the GNA receives support from Turkey.
Operation Irene replaced Operation Sophia, which was
launched in 2015, but it is only charged with monitoring the arms embargo.
Germany is also participating in this new European mission
with 300 soldiers, and the Bundestag approved on Thursday evening for the
German army to participate in the mission and granted it a mandate to do so
until the end of April 2021.
The ships participating in the mission will intervene in
areas far from the migrant smuggling routes, at the request of Austria and
Hungary, which fear that Irene will exacerbate the number of asylum seekers in
Europe.
However, observers believe that this operation remains in
doubt. In this context, EU High Representative for Security and Foreign Policy
Joseph Borrell appeared very reserved and cautious about accusing Turkey of
responsibility for violating the UN resolution banning arms supplies to Libya,
stressing that many parties do this, so one party alone cannot be accused.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


