Alwaght- The UN Secretary-General urged on Tuesday withdrawal of all foreign forces and mercenaries from Libya, as the African state is moving toward the formation of a unity government ten years after its revolution.
Antonio Guterres, speaking with Libya’s newly-appointed Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, “stressed the UN’s support to Libya’s elections, the monitoring of the ceasefire and the need for withdrawal of foreign forces,” said his spokesman Stephane Dujarric.
“I have not gotten to hear any updates on foreign troops leaving. We want that to happen, obviously as soon as possible,” Dujarric added.
Libyan delegates at UN-facilitated talks in Switzerland on Friday selected an interim executive body to lead Libya until December 20201 elections.
Dbeibah, a businessman from the western city of Misrata, has been appointed as the oil-rich country’s new prime minister.
They also elected a three-member presidential council at the end of five days of talks.
Guterres also talked to the president-designate of the Presidency Council, Mohammad Younes Menfi.
Libya has been grappling with unchecked violence since the overthrow of former dictator Muammar Gaddafi in an uprising in 2011.
After 2014, two rival seats of power emerged in Libya, and government forces constantly fought rebel militia aiming to overtake territory.
Foreign countries also dispatched troops and mercenaries to the country. The UN said in December last year that there were about 20,000 foreign troops and mercenaries helping the opposing sides in Libya.
Under a UN-backed ceasefire signed in October last year, foreign troops and mercenaries were to pull out of Libya within three months.
Egypt plans to reopen Libya embassy
Meanwhile, Egypt has announced plans to reopen its embassy in Libya’s capital for the first time in six years.
The plan was discussed by an Egyptian delegation in Tripoli on Monday and Tuesday, in a second visit by an Egyptian delegation to Tripoli since 2014.
Cairo is one of the most prominent backers of rebel commander Khalifa Haftar.