FRI 26 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Jun 29, 2015
Source: The Daily Star
Libyan factions sit at same table in U.N. talks
Reuters
SKHIRAT, Morocco: Officials from Libya’s rival parliaments sat down at the same table for the first time Sunday at the latest round of United Nations-backed peace talks in Morocco – a move negotiators saw as an important step to forming a unity government.

Violence continued in Libya. Twelve soldiers of the Libyan National Army were killed Sunday in clashes with the Al-Qaeda-linked group Abu Salem Brigades, an army spokesman said.

Libya has two governments and parliaments, with the internationally recognized government operating out of the country’s east since an armed alliance known as Libya Dawn took over the capital Tripoli and declared its own government last year.

A new round of talks among the warring factions has been underway in the Moroccan costal town of Skhirat since Friday, hosted by the United Nations in an effort to end a conflict that threatens to break up the oil-producing nation.

Nearly three weeks after U.N. envoy Bernardino Leon handed them a final draft, negotiating teams have been trying to hammer out amendments while hard-liners on the ground keep fighting for a military victory.

“This is definitely an important step,” United Nations mission in Libya spokesman Samir Ghattas said. “We are working on the text that brings in the remarks of the two parties.”

Neighboring European countries are concerned Libya, in the absence of central authority, is becoming a haven for Islamist militants and people smugglers.

The U.N. proposal calls for a one-year-long government of national accord in which a council of ministers headed by a premier and two deputies will have executive authority.

The House of Representatives will be the legislative body, but the accord also sees the creation of a 120-member State Council, consisting of 90 members of the Tripoli parliament.

Terms of a cease-fire, the disarmament of armed groups and their withdrawal from oil facilities and cities are also addressed.

Both sides have agreed in principle to the draft but potentially deal-breaking disagreements remain on the authority of the second chamber, the legitimacy of the House of Representatives, and who controls the commander of the national armed forces.



 
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