UN urges Libyan rivals to place national aspirations before political ambitions in talks
Tunisia's Foreign Minister Othman Jerandi (R) and Stephanie Williams, the deputy special representative of the UN Secretary-General for Political Affairs in Libya, hold a press conference at Carthage Palace on the eastern outskirts Tunis on October 12, 2020. (AFP Photo)


The United Nations’ Libya envoy Stephanie Williams on Monday encouraged rival parties to place national interests above political ambitions when they meet next month for talks aimed at ending a decade of civil war.

The North African country is dominated by armed groups, riven by local conflicts and divided between two bitterly opposed administrations: a U.N.-recognized unity government based in Tripoli and eastern-based putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar.

Neighboring Tunisia is set to host talks in early November that will include representatives of civil society, tribesmen, political leaders and members of bodies representing both administrations.

"What we want to see in terms of participation is people who are not there for their own political aspirations, but for their country," Williams said after meeting Tunisian President Kais Saied.

Asked whether Haftar or the head of the Government of National Accord (GNA), Fayez Sarraj, would be present, she said participants would be able to take part on the condition "that they remove themselves from consideration in high government positions."

This includes membership in the key Presidential Council, the prime minister's job and ministerial posts, she told Agence France-Presse (AFP).

The talks are intended to prepare the country for national elections, she added.

Tunisia's Foreign Minister Othman Jerandi called for "a dialogue between Libyans that could lead to a political solution to the crisis."

Saied spoke Monday with his Algerian counterpart Abdelmadjid Tebboune, who saluted the renewed dialogue and said that Algeria, another neighbor of Libya, was "always at Tunisia's side."

Tebboune also spoke of a visit to Tunisia after the Nov. 1 referendum on constitutional reform in Algeria.

The Algerian president's office confirmed that the two men had spoken via telephone.

"The President of the Republic, Abdelmadjid Tebboune, received a telephone call on the part of his counterpart Kais Saied, and they reviewed bilateral relations and his planned visit to Tunisia," it said in a statement.

Tebboune "welcomed Tunisia's organisation of inter-Libyan dialogue under the auspices of the UN," the statement said.

A previous agreement between rival Libyan sides, signed in Morocco in 2015, created a unity government that was never recognized by Haftar.

In April 2019, he launched an offensive to seize Tripoli but was pushed back after over a year of fighting.

Since his forces were driven from western Libya, the rival sides have resumed talks on specific themes: institutions, military and political affairs.

The Tunis talks will begin on Oct. 26 by videoconference before continuing face-to-face in early November.