Head of Libyan Presidency Council announces plan to hold international conference

“Libya is at a critical juncture – indeed a defining moment,” Mohamed Younis Menfi, President of the Presidency Council of the Government of National Unity, told world leaders during his in-person address to the UN General Assembly’s annual debate.

“Either we succeed in our democratic transition through free, fair, and transparent elections, the results of which are acceptable to all … or we fail and relapse into division an armed conflict,” he said, setting out a host of challenges to the country faces ahead of the polls.

Ceasefire holds, but challenges remain

Mr. Menfi said that despite heading off attempts to undermine the ceasefire and resolving any disagreements among the Libyan parties, and despite working with the joint military committee to open the road linking eastern and western parts of the country, “the issue of removing mercenaries and foreign forces from the country remains a real challenge.”

“In this regard, we call on the international community to shoulder its responsibility in supporting efforts to address [the challenges posed by foreign forces], with a view to securing the conducive environment for safe free, fair and transparent elections,” he said.

Since assuming Office, the Presidency Council, he said, had made considerable strides to ensure full implementation of agreed commitments, particularly the road map that is a product of the political dialogue, relevant UN Security Council resolutions, and the so-called Berlin Process, the German-facilitated effort supporting UN mediation to end the conflict in Libya.

“However, we are faced with serious challenges and fast-paced developments which compel us to consider more realistic and practical options to help avoid a political impasse that could undermine the upcoming elections and put us back at square one,” he said.

National talks followed by an international conference

With all this in mind, the President of the Presidency Councill made two announcements. First, he said that he would proceed on a track aimed at maintaining the political process and sparing the country further complex political crises.

This would focus on meetings among the stakeholders represented by relevant military and political institutions to facilitate an agreement on effective guarantees to maintain the political process and conduct free and fair elections with results acceptable by all Libyans.

“Working along this track requires a spirit of compromise from all, a spirit of responsibility and placing the interests of the State above all,” he stressed.

He noted that over the past years, Libya had seen several international initiatives and proposals aimed at resolving the crisis, none of which had enjoyed the necessary conditions for success.

So, he continued, to restore the sense of purpose and ensure that any future initiative would be Libyan-owned and Libyan-led, he announced a plan to host an international conference in October.

“Building on the previous outcomes on Libya, [the proposed conference] aims to ensure the continuation of international support in a unified consistent and coherent manner according to a comprehensive national vision” he declared, adding that the conference would be attended by relevant international bodies, as well as regional and international partners.

National reconciliation

Mr. Menfi went on to stress that national reconciliation would be critical to any political process and to achieving political stability. Therefore, the Libyan leadership had made this its utmost priority. It had established the High Commission for national reconciliation and launched the comprehensive reconciliation on 6 September.

He said many steps were being taken to restore trust among Libyans, the first which was the exchange of detainees and the release of a number of prisoners who had either served their sentences or been found innocent.

“But we all know that the road to reconciliation is long and arduous and to get to the end, applying transitional justice, truth, openness, acknowledging past wrongs, reparations and identifying the missing are all necessary. Only with these steps can we move toward a successful genuine national reconciliation,” he concluded.

Source: United Nations

Presidential Council and Kingdom of the Netherlands are discussing strengthening cooperation in the field of human rights.

The Humanitarian Affairs Adviser to the Presidential Council, Maha bin Khalifa, and the Director of the Local Government and Elections Office in the Council, Abdelbaset Gudan, met Thursday morning, the Deputy Head of Mission of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to Libya, Vivan Heugen, and an official in charge of the humanitarian file at the Embassy, “Rana Dozan”, to discuss prospects for enhancing cooperation in the humanitarian field between the Presidential Council and the Kingdom of the Netherlands, to tap into its experience in the field of human rights and national reconciliation, as a member of the special working group in charge of implementing international humanitarian law and human rights.

During the meeting, which was held at the office of the Presidential Council in Tripoli, cooperation in the field of human rights was emphasized. According to the Media Office of the Presidential Council, Maha bin Khalifa and Godan stressed the need to work effectively in this field, in order to reach results that directly contribute to the success of the national reconciliation project, which aims to stabilize Libya, and paves the way for holding elections in Libya. Next December, to achieve the aspirations of the Libyan people towards stability and development.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Media Office of Presidential Council: Al-Menafi meets in New York with foreign ministers.

On the sidelines of his participation in the meetings of the 76th session of the United Nations General Assembly, the President of the Presidential Council, Mohamed Al-Menafi held a series of meetings in New York with foreign ministers of a number of countries that focused on discussing Libya’s relations with these countries and ways to enhance them.

The President of the Presidential Council met at the headquarters of the Libyan mission in New York, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Algeria, Ramtane Lamamra, who renewed his country’s solidarity and permanent support for the Libyan people to embody the priorities of the current stage, stressing the importance of achieving comprehensive national reconciliation that ends the page of division and conflicts.

Al-Menafi praised the positions of Algeria, the president, the government and the people in support of the Libyan political dialogue, and the efforts of national reconciliation, to reach a solution that restores stability and peace to Libya.

Al-Menafi also met at the headquarters of the Libyan mission with the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Saudi Arabia, Prince Faisal bin Farhan bin Abdullah, who affirmed the Kingdom’s keenness to restore stability to Libya, expressing his hope for the success of all stages of the political agreement between all parties.

The President of the Presidential Council praised the positions of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia towards the Libyan crisis, and its welcome to the Libyan political dialogue, and to reach a solution that restores stability and peace to Libya.

The President of the Presidential Council, Mohamed Al-Menafi,also met at the headquarters of the Libyan mission in New York, the Minister of Foreign Affairs of South Africa, Nalidi Pandor. During the meeting, the exil Al-Menafi praised the experience of South Africa in achieving national reconciliation, stressing that this choice was strategic to overcome the difficult period it went through, and stressed the importance of supporting all transitional steps, in order to achieve security and stability in Libya. Minister Pandor conveyed the invitation of President Matamila Cyril Zamafora, to the President of the Presidential Council, Mohamed El Menafi, to visit South Africa during the coming period, in order to strengthen joint relations and cooperation between the two countries. According to the Presidential Media Office, these meetings, which were attended by Libya’s representative to the United Nations, “Taher al-Sunni”, dealt with bilateral relations between Libya and these countries, and a number of regional and international issues of common interest.

Source: Libyan News Agency

President of High Council of State meets a delegation of dignitaries, wise men and sheikhs of the Shwerf region.

Tripoli, President of the High Council of State, Khaled Al-Mashri, met, Monday, with a delegation of dignitaries, wise men and sheikhs of the Shwerf region, at the council’s headquarters in the capital, Tripoli. During the meeting, they discussed the importance of holding elections, and the council’s role in creating the appropriate atmosphere and conditions for such elections.

Al-Mashri affirmed the council’s keenness on the unity of the Libyan soil and the unification of the word of Libyans of all stripes; and harnessing efforts to build the state that all Libyans aspire to and that preserves their dignity. The meeting also touched on the problems that the Shwerf region suffers from, especially the service ones, where Al-Mashri noted that the council will urge the government of national unity to pay attention to the region, provide all services to it and achieve development in it.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Tunisia Calls for Meeting in New York on Situation in Libya.

New York, Members of the UN Security Council and the League of Arab State are expected to hold, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly meeting, a non-official interactive meeting, called by the Tunisian delegate at the International Security Council Tareq Al Adab, given that his country is the current Arab member of the Council, to discuss situation in Libya and the Arab region.

Press sources in Cairo quoted Arab League officials as saying the Secretary General of the Arab League Ahamed Abu Al Ghaith will head to America to take part in the meeting.

Source: Libyan News Agency

Al-Koni agrees with President Tebboune to mark the celebration of the Battle of Essyene as a joint Libyan-Algerian event.

Algeria, Representative in the Presidential Council, “Moussa El-Koni” and Algerian President, “Abdel Majid Tebboune” agreed to mark the commemoration of the historic battle of Essyene as a joint Libyan-Algerian national event, and an important station in the history of deep-rooted bilateral relations that highlighted the value of cohesion and the mixing of blood between the two brotherly peoples in Libya and Algeria.

Deputy “Al-Koni” and President “Tebboune” decided during their meeting yesterday, Thursday in the Algerian capital, to register the date of the commemoration of the Battle of Essyene as a joint Libyan-Algerian event that trusted the joint jihadist epic on October 4, 1957.

During the meeting, it was emphasized that this joint jihadist battle against French colonialism, which will mark its 64th anniversary on the 4th of next October, is a historical event that embodies par excellence the meaning of one destiny, solidarity, cohesion and strategic integration between the two neighboring countries and the two brotherly peoples in Libya and Algeria.

The celebration of this anniversary comes every year to remind the generations in Libya and Algeria of a common jihadist epic against colonialism in which the pure blood between the two peoples was mixed, and in remembrance of the sacrifices of the ancestors for the sake of the homeland in the two countries.

The Battle of Essyene took place on October 4, 1957 in the village of Essyene in the south of the Libyan town of Ghat, when it began with an agreement between the Libyan and Algerian Mujahedeen to ambush a French supply convoy and burn it in the Algerian city of Djanet, and then withdraw to Libyan territory, so the French occupation army pursued them inside Libyan soil, and bombing the border village of Essyene between Algeria and Libya with planes in response to the operation carried out by the Algerian Mujahedeen from Libyan lands, and France accused Libya of supporting Algeria, and as a result of that, the Essyene battle took place between the Libyans and the French army.

The Algerian historian, “Mohamed Al-Arabi Al-Zubayri” says that the battle of the village of Essyene in southwest Libya on the border with Algeria opened the door to the struggle against the French colonialists in southeast Algeria and contributed to breaking the siege on the north after the fighting intensified.

For his part, Professor of History at the University of Tipaza, Mohamed Mawdoo’ – as published in the Algerian newspaper Al-Shaab on 02-10-2019 – praised the positive role played by the Libyan people in embracing the glorious revolution.

Source: Libyan News Agency