TRIPOLI, Libya
Libya’s 5+5 Joint Military Commission (JMC) agreed on
Monday with representatives from neighboring states to fully cooperate on the
exit of all foreign fighters belonging to their countries from the Libyan
territory, official Egyptian media reported.The Prime Minister of Government of National Unity, Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh (C) poses for a photo after a meeting with delegates of the 5+5 Joint Military Commission in Sirte, Libya on March 15, 2021
During
the two-day talks in Egypt’s capital Cairo and sponsored by the United Nations,
representatives of Sudan, Chad and Niger expressed their readiness to receive
the fighters belonging to their countries and coordinate with the Libyan
parties to guarantee that they will not return to Libya, state-run Ahram Online
news website reported.
After
the meeting held in Geneva on October 8, the JMC signed a comprehensive Action
Plan for the gradual, balanced, and sequenced withdrawal of mercenaries,
foreign fighters and foreign forces from the Libyan territory.
The
work of the 5+5 JMC, or the security track, is one of the three intra-Libyan
tracks that the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) is working on, along with
the economic and political ones.
These
tracks were endorsed by the UN Security Council Resolution 2510 in 2020, which
called on both parties in Libya to reach a permanent cease-fire agreement.
According
to Ahram Online, all parties participating in the Cairo meeting stressed the
importance of setting up permanent and effective channels of communication to
end the years-long predicament, which stands in the way of Libya’s stability
and is seen as a linchpin for shoring up a year-old cease-fire.
Libya
has been locked in a civil war since the ouster and killing of former leader
Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. The situation escalated in 2014, splitting power
between two rival governments: the UN-backed Government of National Accord
based in the capital Tripoli and a Tobruk-based one allied with military
commander Khalifa Haftar.
In
February, Libya’s warring factions agreed to form an interim government under
the auspices of the United Nations to run the North African country until the
general elections scheduled for December 24.
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