BFF-27 Libya ceasefire agreed after months of fighting

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LIBYA-CONFLICT-DIPLOMACY -LEAD

Libya ceasefire agreed after months of fighting

TRIPOLI, Jan 12, 2020 (BSS/AFP) – Both sides in Libya’s conflict agreed to
a ceasefire from Sunday to end nine months of fighting following weeks of
international diplomacy and calls for a truce by power-brokers Russia and
Turkey.

The oil-rich North African country has been wracked by bloody turmoil
since a NATO-backed uprising killed long-time dictator Moamer Kadhafi in
2011, with multiple foreign powers now involved.

Since April last year, the UN-recognised Government of National Accord
(GNA) in Tripoli has been under attack from forces loyal to eastern-based
strongman Khalifa Haftar, which days ago captured the strategic coastal city
of Sirte.

Late on Saturday, Haftar’s forces announced a ceasefire starting at
midnight (Sunday 00:00 local time, Saturday 2200 GMT) in line with a joint
call by Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and his Russian counterpart
Vladimir Putin.

Early Sunday the head of the GNA, Fayez al-Sarraj, also announced his
acceptance of the ceasefire, saying it had taken effect at the start of
Sunday.

The UN mission in Libya welcomed the announcements and called on all
parties “to respect the ceasefire” and to support efforts to launch an inter-
Libyan dialogue.

Likewise, the Arab League called on Libya’s factions to “commit to stop
the fighting, work on alleviating all forms of escalations and engage in good
faith aimed at reaching permanent arrangements for a ceasefire.”

Since the start of the offensive against Tripoli, more than 280 civilians
have been killed, 2,000 fighters have died and 146,000 Libyans have been
displaced, according to the United Nations.

– Diplomatic offensive –

Sarraj stressed the GNA’s “legitimate right … to respond to any attack or
aggression” that may come from the other side, while Haftar’s forces warned
of a “severe” response to any violation by the “opposing camp”.

Artillery fire could be heard shortly after midnight in the capital, before
quiet settled over the southern Tripoli suburb where pro-GNA forces have been
resisting Haftar’s offensive.

No ceasefire monitoring mechanism has been announced, but the GNA leader
called for both sides to “prepare ceasefire measures under the aegis of the
UN”, without providing further details.

The ceasefire comes after a diplomatic offensive, led by Ankara and
Moscow, which have established themselves as key players in Libya, supporting
opposing sides.

Ankara deployed military support to the GNA in January. Russia has been
accused of backing pro-Haftar forces, which are also supported by the United
Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia and Egypt, all regional rivals of Turkey.

Erdogan and Putin called for a truce at a meeting on Wednesday in Istanbul,
and Turkey on Saturday asked Russia to convince Haftar, who had initially
vowed to fight on, to respect it.

– Fears of a ‘second Syria’ –

Europe and North Africa have also launched a diplomatic offensive to try to
prevent Libya, with the increased involvement of international players in its
conflict, from turning into a “second Syria”.

European governments, also including former colonial power Italy, are
concerned that Islamist militants and migrant smugglers, already highly
active in Libya, will take further advantage of the chaos.

The US embassy in Libya, in a statement Saturday, voiced its “serious
concern about toxic foreign interference in the conflict”.

It said “Russian mercenaries” had backed Haftar’s Libyan Arab Armed Forces
while “Turkish-supported Syrian fighters” had backed the GNA, a development
that had “significantly degraded security, to the detriment of all Libyans”.

It continued: “All responsible Libyan parties should end this dangerous
escalation and reject the destructive involvement by foreign forces.”

On Saturday Putin and German Chancellor Angela Merkel met in Moscow and
called for international efforts to address the crisis in Libya.

Merkel said she hoped “the Turkish-Russian efforts will be successful,”
calling a ceasefire a first step in a peace process.

Putin and Merkel both backed a Libya peace conference in Berlin being
organised by UN special envoy to Libya, Ghassan Salame, which could be held
in the coming weeks.

Putin on Saturday again denied Russia had deployed mercenaries to Libya,
saying: “if there are Russians there, they do not represent the interests of
the Russian state and do not receive money from it.”

BSS/AFP/RY/1720 hrs