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UN team proposes unity government

By Agencies in Skhirat, Morocco | China Daily | Updated: 2015-06-10 07:40

Talks are the only hope of putting end to fighting, Western officials say

United Nations negotiators have handed Libya's warring factions a draft proposal for forming a unity government in an attempt to end a conflict that threatens to push the North African country into becoming a failed state.

Western officials say the UN talks are the only hope of halting fighting between two rival governments and their armed forces that has battered the OPEC country since the 2011 uprising that ended Muammar Gadhafi's one-man rule.

An internationally recognized government has been operating out of eastern Libya since an armed alliance known as Libya Dawn took over the capital Tripoli and set up a self-declared government last summer.

After warning last week that the country was running out of money and risked ceasing to be a functional state, UN representative to Libya, Bernardino Leon, urged the Libyans to approve the fourth version of the draft proposal in a ceremony in Morocco.

"Today, the people of Libya have their eyes on this gathering, on you, in the hope that you'll save your country and your people from protracted conflict," he said on Monday. "I am full of hope that this draft represents a fair and reasonable way forward."

Libya's turmoil is an increasing concern for European leaders as Islamic State militants gain ground there and smugglers take advantage of the chaos to ship thousands of illegal migrants across the Mediterranean Sea to Europe.

Leon told the delegations in the Moroccan city of Skhirat, "You will be receiving the latest draft of the proposed political agreement that has been at the heart of your discussions over the past few months."

Delegates from both factions were expected to head to Germany for a meeting of European and North African leaders before returning to consult with their political bases and traveling back to Morocco.

"At the end of this week, we will have a very clear idea on who is for peace and who is not, and that will help us to focus our efforts in the future," US ambassador to Libya Deborah Jones said.

The UN proposes a one-year-long government of national accord, where a council of ministers headed by a prime minister and two deputies will have executive authority based in Tripoli.

The House of Representatives, the 2014 elected parliament now in the east, will be the only legislative body, the deal states. The accord also recommends a 120-member State Council consultative body, consisting of members of the Tripoli parliament.

The agreement also addresses terms of a cease-fire, disarmament for armed groups, dealing with unified armed forces and withdrawing armed groups from oil facilities, airports and other installations after the deal is signed.

Reuters - AP

 

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