Libya’s Haftar Meets Putin in Moscow for First Time

Commander of the Libyan National Army (LNA) Khalifa Haftar
held talks with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow on Friday in what
was the first official and declared meeting between them.
Libyan sources close to Haftar said he sought to convince
Putin to help lift the embargo that as been imposed on the LNA by the United
Nations Security Council.
They also discussed Russian assistance in developing the
LNA’s weapons, they added.
Haftar had arrived in the Russian capital on Thursday.
The pro-LNA Libyan news agency quoted a source from Haftar’s
office as saying that the trip was a routine visit that falls within the
ongoing coordination between Libya and Russia on counter-terrorism.
Haftar had paid several visits to Russia in the past where
he met with senior officials at the defense and foreign ministries.
Separately, the LNA denied reports of the death of one of
Haftar’s sons, Khaled, during the battle to liberate Tripoli from terrorist and
criminal gangs that are affiliated with the Government of National Accord
(GNA).
It said that the claim was a rumor circulated by the Muslim
Brotherhood press.
Activists also alleged Khaled’s death, saying he was killed
in Turkish drone attacks on Gharyan city, some 80 kms south of the capital.
Khaled leads the 106 brigade. He has appeared in footage
several times since the launch of the operation against Tripoli on April 4.
Meanwhile, Fayez al-Sarraj’s GNA was still banking on a
shift in stance by US President Donald Trump on the Libyan crisis.
GNA media hailed a letter sent by four US congressmen that
calls on Trump to demand a ceasefire in Libya. The congressmen expressed their
concern over Haftar’s operation, warning it may ignite a more violent civil
war.
Near the eastern city of Benghazi, meanwhile, the head of
Libya’s oil workers’ labor union, Saad Dinar, was released on Thursday after
being held by eastern security authorities for almost a month, a relative said.
Earlier in the day, Dinar said on his Facebook page that he
was let go after what he described as “routine interrogation.”
The Tripoli-based Libyan state oil firm NOC called a week
ago for Dinar’s release.