UN chief sees path to Libya unity deal

Bloomberg

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres said Libyan warlord Khalifa Haftar and his competitors in the Tripoli government are closer to finding a power-sharing agreement that would break the political deadlock in the divided North African country.
Haftar and the UN-backed prime minister Fayez al-Sarraj have been negotiating a united caretaker government ahead of possible elections.
But the talks have floundered over how much say Haftar, who leads the self-styled Libyan
National Army, would have in politics.
“What is new is that we see signs that an understanding is possible exactly to overcome the contradiction you raised,” Guterres said in response to a reporter’s question on the dispute over civilian oversight of the military. Guterres, speaking in Tunis ahead of Sunday’s Arab League Summit of regional officials, did not elaborate.
Haftar’s forces swept through the south in an operation beginning in January, leaving them in control of much of the country and ts oil fields. The offensive spurred international pressure on him and Sarraj to reach an agreement.
OPEC member Libya has been in disarray since Muammar Qaddafi, its head of state, was killed in 2011.

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