(MENAFN- Trend News Agency)
Türkiye will continue to stand with Libya without any
hesitation, Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Monday during a
one-day working visit to the North African country, reports citing
.
Holding a joint news conference with his Libyan counterpart
Najla Mangoush following a bilateral meeting in the capital
Tripoli, Cavusoglu said that there is a need for a road map for a
political solution in the war-torn country.
Elections in Libya must be a process decided by Libyans, and
Türkiye places great importance on this, he underlined.
'We will work to evolve the calm on the ground into lasting
peace,' he said.
Cavusoglu also said that all countries on the Mediterranean
coasts should fairly benefit from the resources in the region.
Third countries have no right to interfere with agreements
signed by the two sovereign states, Cavusoglu said on deals between
Türkiye and Libya.
'When the conditions are met, we will open our Benghazi
Consulate General,' he added.
He also announced that Türkiye and Libya signed a memorandum of
understanding in the hydrocarbon area and were due to sign one on
gas as well.
A high-level Turkish delegation arrived in the Libyan capital
Tripoli for an official visit Monday on the instructions of
President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Cavusoglu, Defense Minister Hulusi Akar, Energy and Natural
Resources Minister Fatih Donmez, Trade Minister Mehmet Mush,
Communications Director Fahrettin Altun and Presidential
Spokesperson İbrahim Kalın traveled to Libya for talks on various
issues.
The Turkish officials met with their counterparts, as well as
Mohamed al-Menfi, chairperson of the Libyan Presidential Council;
Abdullah al-Lafi and Musa al-Koni, members of Libya's Presidential
Council; Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Mohammed Dbeibah, leader of the
Tripoli-based unity government, and Khalid al-Mishri, head of
Libya's High Council of State.
During the visit, the officials discussed bilateral relations
and collaboration as part of 2019 agreements on security and
military cooperation and on the limitation of maritime jurisdiction
in the Mediterranean.
They also addressed ways to hold elections in Libya as soon as
possible and the developments regarding legal infrastructure
work.
According to diplomatic sources, a top agenda item was the unity
of all relevant institutions around a concrete plan to preserve
stability in Libya and to hold presidential and parliamentary
elections based on a national consensus as soon as possible.
The delegation was also expected to visit the land allocated by
the Libyan authorities for the construction of the Tripoli Embassy
campus in the Tajura region.
In 2019, Ankara signed a maritime delimitation agreement with
the Government of National Accord (GNA) over the Eastern
Mediterranean that provided a legal framework to prevent any fait
accompli by regional states. The two countries, Türkiye and Libya,
also signed a military cooperation accord.
In August this year, Libya's capital Tripoli saw deadly clashes
between forces backing Dbeibah and those loyal to his rival Fathi
Bashagha, who was appointed by the Tobruk-based parliament as prime
minister. It left 32 people dead and 159 injured.
Libya plunged into chaos following the 2011 overthrow and
killing of dictator Moammar Gadhafi in a NATO-backed uprising, with
myriad armed groups and foreign powers moving in to fill the power
vacuum.
The violence, the worst since reaching a cease-fire in 2020,
came amid military buildups by forces affiliated with Dbeibah and
Bashagha, as both figures claim power and authority in the North
African country.
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