Archive for the ‘Libya’ Category

Libya’s eastern parliament quits UN peace deal with Tripoli – The San Luis Obispo Tribune


The New Arab
Libya's eastern parliament quits UN peace deal with Tripoli
The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Libya's eastern parliament voted Tuesday to withdraw its support for a United Nations peace deal and Government of National Accord, an escalation in the fractured country's split that stokes concerns recent violence could intensify. Abdullah Ablaihig ...
Ambassadors appeal for calm after bloody Libya clashesThe New Arab
News Roundup - Tue, Mar 07, 2017The Libya Observer
Libya's Tobruk parliament eschews 2015 political dealThe Peninsula Qatar
Sputnik International
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Libya's eastern parliament quits UN peace deal with Tripoli - The San Luis Obispo Tribune

22 migrants killed, 100 injured as smugglers battle for supremacy in Libya’s power vacuum – RT

Published time: 7 Mar, 2017 23:38

A total of 22 migrants have been killed and some 100 injured in fighting between rival smuggler gangs in Libya so far this year. This comes at a time when seaborne migration from Africa to Italy has risen by 50 percent so far in 2017.

"This is creating all kinds of activity in the smuggling industry, and apparently that activity has reached the level of violent shootouts that left 22 killed in the last couple of days," Joel Millman, a spokesman for the International Organization for Migration (IOM), the UN migration agency, said in a news briefing on Tuesday as reported Reuters.

The dead were thought to be migrants rather than smugglers because they were sub-Saharan Africans, he added. These deaths are in addition to the 140 dead bodies already found on Libyan beaches to date this year.

On October 20, 2011, the former Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi was captured and killed in his hometown of Sirte by the National Transitional Council (NTC), the UN-recognized representatives of Libya at the time, following the Libyan revolution.

With Gaddafi gone, a power vacuum developed, and Libya quickly split into two with the Tobruk-based parliament and the unity government (NTC) in Tripoli vying for control.

To further complicate matters, various militant groups, including the Islamic State (IS, former ISIS/ISIL), began carving out their own fiefdoms in violent power plays across the war-torn countryside.

Since then, Libya has become the focal point for migrant crossing from Africa to Europe via Italy. In 2016, there were over 181,000 illegal border crossings on the Central Mediterranean route, Libya to Italy, according to Frontex, the EUs border control agency.

There are concerns that Libya will remain permanently fractured as a result of tribal conflicts between the almost 2,000militias and armed groups operating in the country.

The US State Department lists Libya as both a transit and a destination country for human trafficking, with child soldiers, prostitution and forced labor common among the warring factions within the troubled state.

Italian Interior Minister Marco Minniti recently met with city mayors from 10 towns in Libyas southern desert to try and persuade them to join together to prevent human trafficking through Libyan territory into Europe.

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22 migrants killed, 100 injured as smugglers battle for supremacy in Libya's power vacuum - RT

Libya: enter Russia – Times of Malta

Since the Libyan civil war began, the question hovering over everything was will Russia get involved? The answer to that question came when the chief of Libyas UN-created Government of National Accord (GNA), the so-called Prime Minister Fayez Serraj, met with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Moscow.

Having stayed aloof from a messy civil war now into its third year, Russia has decided to effectively replace the void left by the US and become the chief powerbroker not only in Libya but the entire Middle East and North African region. The bad news for Serraj is that the beneficiary as far as Libya is concerned is likely to be his big rival, Field Marshall Khalifa Haftar, commander of the powerful Libyan National Army (LNA). The imagined role in Libya of the EU and the UK is just that: imaginary and delusional.

The admirable efforts of British Ambassador to Libya Peter Millett in trying shuttle diplomacy between stakeholders in Tripoli, Misrata and Haftar and his LNA in the east have achieved nothing but to underline that its Moscow and Washington that is calling the shots. Sadly London has become as irrelevant as Brussels.

It was Haftar that Moscow turned to in January, inviting him for military talks aboard its aircraft carrier, Admiral Kuznetsov, cruising off Libya. And equally Haftar was happy to be courted by Moscow. The talks included a full dress military parade and band playing the Libyan national anthem on the deck, underlining for all to see who Russia wants to do business with.

There is no doubt that Russias policy on Libya is growing stronger and in a positive way for all involved. Moscow is not only talking with all parties but also trying to find a way for the Tripoli government to acquiesce to Haftar and vice-versa. We are carrying out consistent work with both key centres of power in Libya, said the spokesperson for the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Maria Zakharova.

Moscow is not wrong. Haftars battle against extremists in Libya has made him a national hero among the vast majority of the population and brought big victories. Haftars army has almost crushed a galaxy of fanatical militants who had terrorised Benghazi, and killed the US ambassador there in 2012. Most significantly perhaps, last September Haftar captured the countrys main oil ports, giving him control of the eastern oil fields the ones that matter representing at least two-thirds of all the oil in the country.

Already Egypt has given Haftar strong support, as has France, which provided special forces to work with his army in the east of the country.

Russia also senses an opportunity. It has all but won the Syrian civil war, cementing an alliance with Syrias president Bashir Assad and outflanking American efforts to support the rebels

With the oil ticket in his pocket, and rising popular support in a country weary of endless militia skirmishes, rather than decisive battles, Haftar now clearly holds the keys to power.

That much was made even clearer last month when Egypt tried to become peace broker, inviting Haftar to meet with Sarraj in Cairo. Both men showed up, but Haftar said no to a meeting, leaving Serraj stuck in a hotel room with a phone that refused to ring.

There is a reason why Haftar saw no reason to talk to Sarraj: for just as Haftars power is rising, so Serrajs is falling.

His Government of National Accord (GNA), created by the United Nations, is a joke. It is not a government, having failed to win control of key institutions like the Central Bank (CBL) and National Oil Corporation (NOC). It most certainly has failed to win any of the key Libyan tribes. And there is no accord in fact, Serraj is marooned with his presidency in a Tripoli naval base, because militias are the law in the Libyan capital. The rest of his time he spends in Tunis.

Worse, for Sarraj, those militias are fighting with each other, with many backing yet another government in Tripoli, the Salvation Government, in furious street battles recently with tanks and heavy artillery that have turned parts of the capital into a real war zone. Little wonder Haftar refused to meet a man incapable of controlling even his own city.

Officially, Russia takes the side of all Libyans, not one faction, with Lavrov saying: We would like to see Libya a united and prosperous nation relying on stable government institutions and a viable army. But Russia also senses an opportunity. Already it has all but won the Syrian civil war, cementing an alliance with Syrias president Bashir Assad and outflanking American efforts to support the rebels.

Now it is poised to do the same in Libya, in contrast to the US, Britain and Italy who have been relentlessly backing the GNA.

But talk of a super-power rift between Moscow and Washington may be premature: the Trump administrations key policy advisor Steve Bannon has long campaigned against the Muslim Brotherhood, which is the main supporter of the GNA, and the White House is expected, like the Kremlin, to get behind Haftar, a move that would help also in its objective of doing business with Russia.

Even Britain, arch supporter of Serraj, is having to rethink. Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson now says a place must be found for Haftar in Libyas government.

Meanwhile, on March 2, the Parliamentary Foreign Affairs Committee published a report on the UKs relations with Russia, urging the foreign office to conduct meaningful dialogue with the Kremlin.

The committees chairman, Crispin Blunt, said: Refusal to engage with Russia is not a viable, long-term policy option.

Hes right: Moscow is spreading its wings in the Middle East and North Africa. Its desire to move into Libya was emphasised in another way last week, when Rosneft, the state oil giant, signed a deal to invest heavily with Libyas state oil corporation (East NOC). After years in the wings, Russia has finally arrived in Libya (and the region), and western powers are slowly becoming aware of that fact.

MENA countries are more and more looking forthepower broking role to betaken up by Moscow rather than the US or UN and certainly not by the UK or EU. A new 21st century reality.

Richard Galustian is a British political and security advisor based in MENA countries for nearly 40 years.

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Libya: enter Russia - Times of Malta

Oil Edges Higher on Libya Supply Disruptions – Morningstar.com

By Kevin Baxter and Biman Mukherji

Oil prices made slight gains Tuesday amid supply disruptions in Libya, but lingering concerns over Chinese growth and U.S. stockpiles kept prices within their recent trading corridor.

The May contract for global crude benchmark Brent was up 0.1% at $56.12 a barrel while April deliveries of its U.S. counterpart West Texas Intermediate gained 0.2% to $53.37.

Libya's two largest ports have been shut due to fresh clashes, cutting output by over 50,000 barrels a day. Meanwhile in Gabon, a majority of oil workers agreed to go on a general strike, notes an ANZ Bank report.

Monday's 2017 annual outlook report from the Paris-based International Energy Agency is also being interpreted as bullish in the short-term by most observers.

The IEA said that oil demand growth is expected to average about 1.2 million barrels a day between now and 2022 and should bring the global surplus down, aided by the current output cuts being implemented by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries along with some producers outside the cartel.

Olivier Jakob from the Switzerland-based Petromatrix said that the majority of the global demand increases will be met by non-OPEC supply over the next two years according to the IEA.

Speculative financial investors have retreated from the market in the past week, despite oil's recent price stability. Germany's Commerzbank said contracts expecting a rise in oil prices, known as net long positions, in Brent had fallen by 41,000 last week, while in WTI they fell by 37,000.

"In absolute terms, however, 469,300 contracts in Brent and 368,600 contracts in WTI still constitute a very high level," analysts from Commerzbank said.

Meanwhile, Russia's energy minister said Monday that the nation is gradually reducing its oil production in line with an agreement reached with OPEC late last year and should be fully compliant by the end of April.

Russia had agreed to reduce its output by 300,000 barrels a day as part of a broad effort by OPEC and other producers to boost prices, but is behind target on meeting that commitment.

Nymex reformulated gasoline blendstock for April--the benchmark gasoline contract--rose 1.1% to $1.69 a gallon while diesel futures gained 0.5% to $1.61.

ICE gasoil for March changed hands at $492.5 a metric ton, up 0.5% from Monday's settlement.

Write to Kevin Baxter at Kevin.Baxter@wsj.com and Biman Mukherji at biman.mukherji@wsj.com

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

March 07, 2017 07:41 ET (12:41 GMT)

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Oil Edges Higher on Libya Supply Disruptions - Morningstar.com

Heavy Fighting Reported at Key Libya Oil Terminals, Hindering Exports – Antiwar.com

When NATO decided to impose regime change in Libya, many nations in Europe had visions of a massive influx of oil imports from the Mediterranean coast, with several European companies, most predominantly Italys Eni, investing heavily in an oil industry which has only intermittently managed exports amid fighting.

Today, the fighting is picking up again, with the Islamist Benghazi Defense Brigade launching the latest attack against the main oil export terminals at Sidra and Ras Lanuf, capturing the area, and sparking a new round of fighting with Gen. Khalifa Hifter and his self-proclaimed Libyan National Army.

Hifter, a former CIA asset, had only captured the area himself a few months prior, expelling Petrol Guards loyal to the unity government from the area. The Petrol Guards were short-handed because they launched an offensive against the coastal city of Sirte.

US, British and French Ambassadors have urged calm in the area around the export site, citing concerns that the fighting could seriously damage the infrastructure and cut off exports for the long-term, until European companies pony up more money to repair it again.

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Heavy Fighting Reported at Key Libya Oil Terminals, Hindering Exports - Antiwar.com