Haftar calls on LNA to drive out the Turkish occupier
Eastern Libyan strongman Khalifa Haftar has called
on his fighters to "drive out" Turkish forces backing the
UN-recognised government, as talks drag on to end long-running war in the
oil-rich nation.
"There will be no peace in the presence of a
coloniser on our land," Haftar said, in a speech to mark Libya's 69th
anniversary of its independence on Thursday.
"We will therefore take up arms again to
fashion our peace with our own hands... and, since Turkey rejects peace and
opts for war, prepare to drive out the occupier by faith, will and
weapons," Haftar said.
Libya was thrown into chaos after a 2011 NATO-backed
uprising toppled and led to the killing of long-time dictator Moamer Kadhafi.
Wracked by violence since then, the North African
country has become a battleground for tribal militias, jihadists and
mercenaries and a major gateway for desperate migrants bound for Europe.
Two rival camps now vie for power, with Khaftar's
eastern-based administration pitted against the Tripoli-based Government of
National Accord (GNA), recognised by the United Nations and backed by Ankara.
Turkey's help with military advisers, materiel and
mercenaries helped the GNA push back Haftar's forces from the gates of Tripoli
earlier this year.
Haftar, who is backed by Egypt, the United Arab
Emirates and Russia, spoke after Ankara's parliament this week adopted a motion
extending the deployment of soldiers in Libya by 18 months.
"Officers and soldiers, get ready", Haftar
said Thursday, calling out to hundreds of soldiers on parade in a military
barracks in the eastern port city of Benghazi.
At the same time, the GNA-head in Tripoli, Fayez
al-Sarraj, called on Libyans to "turn the page on disagreements to achieve
stability".
This will only happen through "solidarity
between political forces", he said.
A ceasefire signed in October under the aegis of the
UN, and generally respected, has allowed the rival parties to return to the
negotiating table.
Sarraj said elections slated for December 24, 2021
were a "historic opportunity that should not be missed".
But analysts were less optimistic and warned of
tough challenges ahead.
"The October 23 ceasefire agreement silenced
the guns, but otherwise is a dead letter: both sides have backtracked on
fulfilling its terms and instead continue to build up their military
forces," the International Crisis Group (ICG) said.
"Neither side appears keen to implement its
commitments and both seem determined to dig in further."



