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UN to host new round of talks among Libyan parties with view to ending crisis

| | Jan 11, 2015, at 06:16 pm
New York, Jan 11 (IBNS) Libyan parties have agreed to hold in Geneva next week a new round of United Nations-facilitated political talks aimed at helping all sides reach “common ground” to end the current political and security crisis, the UN Mission in the strife-torn country announced today.
The primary objective of the meeting, which will be hosted by the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) at the United Nations Office at Geneva, will be to reach agreement on the management of the remainder of the transitional period, including the formation of a unity government that enjoys wide support, and pave the way for a stable environment for the constitutional process in which a new permanent constitution can be adopted.
 
In a press statement, UNSMIL noted that the discussions between the Libyan stakeholders will also seek to put in place the necessary security arrangements in order to bring an end to the armed hostilities raging in different parts of the country.
 
The agreement to hold the next round of dialogue comes after wide-ranging and intensive consultations with the parties by UNSMIL chief Bernardino León over the past several weeks. To create a conducive environment for the dialogue,  León has proposed to the parties to the conflict a “freeze” in military operations for a few days.
 
As fighting between armed factions continued to rattle the war-weary North African nation,  León warned just days ago that time was running out, and the longer efforts to tackle the crisis are delayed, the more difficult it would be to reach a solution to end the fighting, restore political and State institutional unity and revive the economy.
 
Emphasizing that the political dialogue process is Libyan-led, and that the Mission's facilitating role is to help in the search for common ground, UNSMIL stressed on Saturday that this new dialogue “is an important opportunity for the Libyans to restore stability and prevent the country's slide towards deeper conflict and economic collapse that should not be missed.”
 
The Mission urged the main stakeholders to approach the fresh talks with courage and determination and put the national interest above all other considerations in this critical juncture in the country's political transition, “abiding by the democratic principles of the 17th of February revolution that united the Libyan people and also united the international community in support of Libya.”
 
Libya's civil war began in 2011 and resulted in the ouster of late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi.
 

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