The Prague Post - Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement

EUR -
AED 4.2819
AFN 76.374334
ALL 96.860138
AMD 448.026574
ANG 2.087005
AOA 1069.162976
ARS 1670.167667
AUD 1.77806
AWG 2.1016
AZN 1.985186
BAM 1.959415
BBD 2.349915
BDT 142.693258
BGN 1.955467
BHD 0.43951
BIF 3455.834481
BMD 1.165936
BND 1.512157
BOB 8.079907
BRL 6.272616
BSD 1.166717
BTN 102.885934
BWP 15.571461
BYN 3.976402
BYR 22852.346771
BZD 2.346609
CAD 1.631786
CDF 2600.03757
CHF 0.926587
CLF 0.027968
CLP 1097.169091
CNY 8.29033
CNH 8.275575
COP 4483.607118
CRC 584.768821
CUC 1.165936
CUP 30.897306
CVE 111.00221
CZK 24.322011
DJF 207.210139
DKK 7.469645
DOP 74.678701
DZD 151.461161
EGP 55.234937
ERN 17.489041
ETB 176.410701
FJD 2.640958
FKP 0.874775
GBP 0.875944
GEL 3.171093
GGP 0.874775
GHS 12.659356
GIP 0.874775
GMD 85.113364
GNF 10119.742784
GTQ 8.937489
GYD 244.100346
HKD 9.059271
HNL 30.746018
HRK 7.536025
HTG 152.808643
HUF 388.203126
IDR 19365.614984
ILS 3.79929
IMP 0.874775
INR 102.913037
IQD 1527.376238
IRR 49042.186481
ISK 143.024997
JEP 0.874775
JMD 186.981759
JOD 0.826667
JPY 177.315838
KES 150.642686
KGS 101.961512
KHR 4692.893136
KMF 493.190734
KPW 1049.320014
KRW 1674.09819
KWD 0.357558
KYD 0.97224
KZT 627.091975
LAK 25300.812679
LBP 104449.928167
LKR 354.764735
LRD 213.890633
LSL 20.101018
LTL 3.442706
LVL 0.705263
LYD 6.348525
MAD 10.75695
MDL 19.886581
MGA 5270.030995
MKD 61.640916
MMK 2447.732564
MNT 4184.029898
MOP 9.3339
MRU 46.71328
MUR 52.887239
MVR 17.850373
MWK 2024.664797
MXN 21.497576
MYR 4.894012
MZN 74.514634
NAD 20.100727
NGN 1698.290942
NIO 42.847588
NOK 11.650051
NPR 164.61588
NZD 2.019827
OMR 0.44829
PAB 1.166753
PEN 3.949019
PGK 4.890228
PHP 69.027675
PKR 327.627795
PLN 4.238574
PYG 8260.168511
QAR 4.245465
RON 5.084066
RSD 117.245404
RUB 93.276085
RWF 1690.607287
SAR 4.372341
SBD 9.596344
SCR 15.948255
SDG 701.30878
SEK 10.926098
SGD 1.510001
SHP 0.874754
SLE 27.046206
SLL 24449.095656
SOS 665.616592
SRD 46.517929
STD 24132.522421
STN 24.951032
SVC 10.208264
SYP 12891.551298
SZL 20.100137
THB 37.824713
TJS 10.792009
TMT 4.092436
TND 3.395272
TOP 2.730734
TRY 48.926988
TTD 7.919169
TWD 35.689884
TZS 2874.841521
UAH 49.115171
UGX 4056.483892
USD 1.165936
UYU 46.525836
UZS 14064.104667
VES 248.520408
VND 30696.764581
VUV 142.191343
WST 3.26229
XAF 657.158132
XAG 0.025072
XAU 0.000297
XCD 3.151
XCG 2.102662
XDR 0.817294
XOF 656.422273
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.250893
ZAR 20.110706
ZMK 10494.824262
ZMW 25.639082
ZWL 375.430936
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    79.09

    0%

  • NGG

    -0.6500

    76.52

    -0.85%

  • VOD

    -0.0250

    11.875

    -0.21%

  • SCS

    0.0050

    16.63

    +0.03%

  • RELX

    -0.0900

    46.48

    -0.19%

  • RIO

    0.3910

    70.931

    +0.55%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    14.91

    +0.2%

  • CMSC

    0.0000

    24.315

    0%

  • BCE

    -0.1950

    23.285

    -0.84%

  • JRI

    -0.0450

    14.035

    -0.32%

  • GSK

    -0.1300

    43.67

    -0.3%

  • AZN

    -0.4700

    83.59

    -0.56%

  • BTI

    0.0750

    52.165

    +0.14%

  • BCC

    -1.2450

    71.775

    -1.73%

  • CMSD

    0.0000

    24.65

    0%

  • BP

    -0.1150

    34.655

    -0.33%

Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement
Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement / Photo: Abdullah DOMA - AFP/File

Libya commander Haftar seeks to force international engagement

Libya's eastern authorities recently expelled a senior European delegation in a move analysts say was meant to send a message: the unrecognised administration backed by military leader Khalifa Haftar cannot be ignored.

Text size:

On July 8, an EU commissioner and ministers from Greece, Italy and Malta were in Libya to discuss irregular migration from the North African country.

Their visit was divided in two, as is Libya, which is still grappling with the aftermath of the armed conflict and political chaos that followed the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that toppled longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi.

The delegation first visited the capital Tripoli, seat of the internationally recognised Libyan government of Prime Minister Abdelhamid Dbeibah.

They then travelled to Benghazi, in the east, where a rival administration backed by Haftar and his clan is based, and with whom the EU has generally avoided direct contact.

Almost immediately, a reported disagreement prompted the eastern authorities to accuse the European delegation of a "flagrant breach of diplomatic norms", ordering the visiting dignitaries to leave.

In Brussels, the European Commission admitted a "protocol issue".

Tarek Megerisi, a senior policy fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations think tank, said the scene at the airport "was a calculated move".

Haftar was playing to EU fears of irregular migration in order "to generate de facto European recognition", and thus "broaden relations with Europe away from just engagement with him as a local military leader".

Turning the delegation away showed that declining to engage with the eastern civilian administration was no longer an option.

- 'Punish Athens' -

The complex situation in Libya has required unusual diplomacy.

European governments recognise and work with the Tripoli-based government and not the eastern administration, but still hold contact with Haftar's military forces.

In their visit earlier this month, the European commissioner and ministers were meant to meet with eastern military officials.

But once at the Benghazi airport, they saw "there were people there that we had not agreed to meet", a European official in Brussels told journalists on condition of anonymity.

"We had to fly back," the official said, adding that "of course" it was linked to recognition of the eastern government.

Claudia Gazzini, a Libya expert at the International Crisis Group, said she did not believe "it was a premeditated incident".

But "the question does present itself as to why" ministers from the eastern government were at the airport in the first place, and why Haftar would let it play out the way it did, she said.

"We can't completely rule out that there was some particular issue or bilateral disagreement with one of the countries represented in the delegation," Gazzini added.

Libya expert Jalel Harchaoui suggested Greece may have been the target.

On July 6, two days before the axed visit, "the Greek foreign minister had come to demand concessions on migration and maritime (issues) without offering any tangible incentives", Harchaoui said.

Despite Haftar's personal involvement, the July 6 visit "had yielded nothing", added the expert.

Then, on July 8, "a Greek representative -- this time as part of an EU delegation -- wanted to negotiate on the same day with the rival Tripoli government, placing the two governments on an equal footing", he said.

This was "an affront in Benghazi's view", Harchaoui said, and the administration wanted to "punish Athens".

- Legitimacy -

To Harchaoui, the diplomatic flap was a sign not to "underestimate" the Haftars' foreign policy.

"The Haftar family is an absolutely essential actor" in tackling the influx of migrants or, for example, advancing energy projects, due to its key role in securing Libya's eastern coast, said Harchaoui.

The message delivered at the Benghazi airport "is clear: take the eastern faction seriously", he added.

Harchaoui said that the Haftars, already "rich in cash and strong" in terms of strategic assets, have recently increased efforts to "consolidate their legitimacy".

Haftar himself was hosted in February by French President Emmanuel Macron, and in May by Russia's Vladimir Putin.

And Haftar's son, Saddam, recently visited the United States, Turkey, Italy and Niger.

Even Ankara, which has provided support for the Tripoli-based government in repelling attacks from the east, "is now seeking to further profit off the Haftars through things like construction projects", said Megerisi.

He added that Turkey also has wider geopolitical ambitions, hoping to see the Haftars endorse a maritime border agreement in the eastern Mediterranean, which Tripoli had already signed but Athens regards as illegal.

F.Vit--TPP