Sunday, February 23, 2020

Turkey's Erdogan confirms sending Syrian fighters to Libya

A soldier mans a weapon during a security patrol in Tripoli's Tajura neighbourhood [File: Ismail Zitouny/Reuters]

Turkish president for the first time announces presence of Syrian fighters allied with Turkey in Libya to support GNA.

Pro-Turkish Syrians are fighting in Libya alongside military trainers dispatched by Ankara, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan admitted for the first time on Friday. 
Turkey supports the UN-recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) based in Tripoli and sent dozens of military training personnel after the two countries signed a series of deals last year.
"Turkey is there with a training force. There are also people from the Syrian National Army," Erdogan told reporters in Istanbul, referring to the group of rebels fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government.
The GNA has been under sustained attack for months from eastern-based renegade military commander Khalifa Haftar, whose principal backers include the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and Egypt.
Last month, the warring sides agreed to a truce and although there have been violations, they have held two rounds of talks in Geneva.
Haftar, meanwhile, said he would agree to a permanent ceasefire if Syrian "mercenaries" left Libya, and Turkey ended its support for the GNA, according to RIA news agency.
"A ceasefire [would] be the result of a number of conditions being fulfilled … the withdrawal of Syrian and Turkish mercenaries, an end to Turkish arms supplies to Tripoli, and the liquidation of terrorist groups," Haftar was quoted as saying on Friday.
But Haftar warned he would not hesitate to use force if his conditions were not met. 
The GNA in Tripoli agreed to resume negotiations on Thursday after suspending talks with Haftar's Libyan National Army (LNA) after rocket attacks on the capital's strategic port on Tuesday.
Several rounds of talks focused on economic issues, including fairer distribution of Libya's oil wealth, have also taken place in Egypt and Tunisia, while talks aimed at a political solution are scheduled to start in Geneva on February 26.
Ceasefire talks between Libya's warring sides are going in the "right direction" while hitting hurdles over violations of an arms embargo and the truce declared last month, the UN envoy for Libya Ghassan Salame told Reuters News Agency on Friday.
Salame, in an interview during a break in military talks in Geneva, said he expected political-level talks to convene in the Swiss city on February 26 but was already working on confidence-building measures.
"In parallel, we are trying to make air travel a bit safer in Libya especially from Mitiga as well as Misrata. We are also trying to reopen the port to be a safe harbour," Salame said. "And we are also trying ... to help in an exchange of prisoners between the parties."