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Libya: Disagreements in the Security Council are bridged

The United Nations Security Council met in camera yesterday to discuss Libya and the future role of the United Nations, two issues that continue to be divisive, especially with regard to the appointment of a new special envoy, according to diplomatic sources. .

The mandate of the UN Political Mission in Libya (MANUL) typically expires on April 30th.

Since the second quarter of 2021, when Slovak diplomat Jan Koubis submitted his resignation (in November), there has been a lot of disagreement about Libya in the SA. MANUL’s current mandate was only renewed for four months in September and only three months in January.

According to an unnamed diplomat, UN Under-Secretary-General for Political Affairs Rosemary DiCarlo insisted at yesterday’s meeting that the mandate should be extended, specifically for one year. .

Asked about Libya during the daily briefing of accredited authors, UN spokesman Stefan Duzarik said: “The key message, publicly and privately, is that Libyan leaders need to unite for their own good. of the Libyan people “.

Since November, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has not submitted to the SA the names of candidates for the succession of Jan Koubis, whose post will theoretically be transferred from Geneva to Tripoli. He named US diplomat Stephanie Williams, former co-director of MANUL, a special adviser for Libya. First, her term ends at the end of April.

According to diplomats, Africa, which would like to see an African diplomat named UN envoy to Libya, suggested different names to Antonio Guterres. This initiative is supported by Russia and China.

Libya has struggled to turn the tide of more than a decade since the ouster of Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 in the wake of the so-called Arab Spring. It is plunged again into a major political crisis, with two rival prime ministers vying for power, a situation similar to that from 2014 to 2021.

In February, parliament in the eastern part of the country named former Interior Minister Fati Basaga as prime minister, but the UN-backed government in Tripoli under Abdelhamid Dbaiba refused to relinquish power. The institutional crisis threatens to rekindle the civil war.

Source: ΑΠΕ-ΜΠΕ

Source: Capital

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