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Libya envoy says text of peace deal finalized

September 22, 2015

The United Nations has handed Libya's warring factions a final draft of a peace accord to end their conflict. Hardliners from both sides had long resisted peace talks, hoping they could gain more from the conflict.

https://p.dw.com/p/1Ga8f
Clashes outside Sirte
Image: Reuters/G. Tomasevic

UN envoy Bernardino Leon said late on Monday that a final text of a peace deal for war-torn Libya had been reached at talks in the Moroccan resort of Skhirate.

Handing the final draft of a peace accord to Libya's warring factions, Leon said the UN's work was over and they had to take the deal or leave it.

"We have now a text that is a final text, and our part in the process is now finished," the envoy said after a lengthy day of negotiations between delegates.

"Now it is up to the parties, the participants to react to this text."

Bernardino Leon
UN envoy Leon said the United Nations' job in Libya was overImage: picture-alliance/dpa/S. Di Nolfi

Leon added that the factions inside Libya would now have to agree to the text and that he hoped discussions on the makeup of a national unity government would take place after the end of this week's Islamic Eid festival.

He further explained that all parties had confirmed their willingness to return to discuss representatives for a united government within days and for a deal to be signed in Libya before October 20.

Last-minute offensive draws UN reproach

Libya's chaotic civil war saw the country's numerous militias line up behind the internationally recognized government based in the far eastern city of Tobruk and a rival Islamist administration in the capital Tripoli, in the west.

The conflict has allowed the "Islamic State" extremist group to gain territory in the center of the country and has added to the flow of refugees and migrants leaving its Mediterranean coast in the hope of reaching Europe.

Libyan refugees at sea
The conflict in Libya has added to the number of refugees entering Europe in recent monthsImage: Reuters/D. Zammit Lupi

Recent days saw an uptick in fighting, as Tobruk's army commander General Khalifa Haftar launched a renewed assault on hard-line Islamist militias in the eastern city of Benghazi, drawing criticism from the United Nations. On Sunday, the UN accused the army of Libya's internationally recognized government of deliberately trying to sabotage the peace talks with a new offensive in Benghazi.

Libya has suffered constant instability since the overthrow and killing of long-time ruler Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

ss/cmk (Reuters, dpa)