The head of Libya’s UN-backed unity government yesterday called for urgent talks after forces loyal to a rival administration seized the main eastern oil ports in defiance of world powers.
The seizure of all four export terminals in the so-called “oil crescent” was a major blow to Libyan Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj’s government, which is almost entirely dependent on oil revenue for its income.
UN envoy Martin Kobler, who had called repeatedly for a halt to the offensive led by controversial military strongman Khalifa Haftar, was later yesterday to brief the UN Security Council on the crisis.
The Government of National Accord is the centerpiece of UN efforts to end five years of chaos in Libya since the overthrow of late Libyan leader Muammar Qaddafi, and it now faces an even tougher battle to assert its authority over the rival administration in the east.
Al-Sarraj said that Libya was at a “turning point” after the assault on the oil ports, with its future as a united nation in serious question.
“I call on all sides to halt provocative actions and sit down urgently at the same table to discuss a mechanism that would enable us to get out of this crisis and put a stop to the conflict,” al-Sarraj said. “I am not prepared to rule one part of Libya, nor to lead a war against another part.”
It was the first fighting between the forces of the rival administrations since al-Sarraj established his government in Tripoli in March.
The capture of the oil crescent means that the rival administration now controls virtually all of the eastern Cyrenaica region.
The writ of al-Sarraj’s government is confined to the western Tripolitania region, where its forces have been battling extremists of the Islamic State group in the coastal city of Sirte for months.
The Petroleum Facilities Guard, which had been responsible for the defense of the oil ports, has played a prominent role in the fighting against the Islamic State, and Haftar’s forces took advantage of the absence of many of its members to seize all four ports in just three days.
Haftar, 73, who sees himself as Libya’s savior after battling extremists out of most of the main eastern city of Benghazi, is the most powerful backer of the eastern administration.
Western governments have voiced serious concern that Libya’s deepening divisions can only play into the hands of militants and their efforts to establish a base in the North African nation just across the Mediterranean from Europe.
The US and its European allies issued a joint statement condemning Haftar’s offensive and calling for the return of the oil ports to unity government control.
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