UK, Italy in agreement on political solution in Libya
- World
- Anadolu Agency
- Published Date: 08:25 | 04 February 2020
- Modified Date: 08:25 | 04 February 2020
The U.K. and Italy remained in agreement on finding a political solution to the conflict in Libya.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and his Italian counterpart Giuseppe Conte met in London at the launch of COP26 -- UN climate change summit, which is due in Glasgow in November.
"On regional issues, the leaders raised the situation in Iran and the conflict in Libya," a government statement said following the meeting.
"The Prime Minister emphasised the importance of upholding the commitments made at the Berlin Conference to end the violence and support UN-led talks to find a political solution to the conflict," it added.
The two leaders also "welcomed the broad bilateral relationship between the U.K. and Italy and agreed to continue to strengthen our alliance in a number of areas including trade, investment and security."
- GENEVA MEETING
A joint military commission representing Libya's UN-recognized government and eastern Libyan forces will meet in Geneva for a second day to help turn the current truce into a "full-fledged ceasefire," said the UN's Libya envoy Tuesday.
On Jan. 12, Libya's conflicting parties announced a truce in response to a joint call by the Turkish and Russian leaders. However, talks for a permanent cease-fire ended without an agreement after eastern-based warlord Khalifa Haftar left Moscow without signing the deal.
Haftar agreed at the Berlin conference last month to designate members to the UN-proposed military commission with five members from each side to monitor implementation of the cease-fire.
All parties at the Berlin conference had asked Libya's Prime Minister Fayez al Sarraj and Haftar, who were in Berlin but not at the conference, "to extend the truce in order for us to give a chance for diplomacy."
The Jan. 21 Berlin agreement commits the signatories not to interfere in Libya's civil war, to support a cease-fire, to honor a widely broken UN arms embargo, and to support a UN-facilitated political process, UN's Libya envoy Ghassan Salame said at the time of the agreement.
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