EU enforces sanctions against Libyan leaders opposing unity government

World Friday 01/April/2016 20:28 PM
By: Times News Service
EU enforces sanctions against Libyan leaders opposing unity government

Brussels/Tripoli: Three Libyan political leaders opposing the UN-backed unity government are from Friday subject to European Union's economic sanctions, the EU official journal said.
Fearful of derailing peace efforts, EU governments hesitated for months before agreeing in March to move on with restrictive measures.
The asset-freeze measures were formally adopted on Thursday and took effect on Friday, two days after the members of the Libya's unity government reached Tripoli by ship, defying attempts to keep them out of the city.
The three men hit by the EU measures are Nouri Abusahmain, president of Libya's General National Congress in Tripoli, one of two rival parliaments; Khalifa Al Ghwell, prime minister of the self-proclaimed Tripoli government; and Aguila Saleh, the president of Libya's internationally recognised parliament.
The EU official journal said they played a central role in obstructing the establishment of a unity government in Libya.
Meanwhile, Tripoli's self-declared government has said it will not cling to power but will peacefully oppose a UN-backed unity government that arrived in the capital this week from Tunisia.
Western powers hope the unity government will seek foreign support to confront the IS militant group, deal with migrant flows from Libya towards Europe and restore oil production to shore up its economy.
But the new government, which held its first meetings in Tripoli on Thursday at a heavily guarded naval base, has failed to win backing from Libya's two rival pairs of governments and parliaments, one based in Tripoli and one in the east.
The head of the Tripoli-based National Salvation government, Khalifa Ghwell, has vehemently opposed any transfer of power. But a statement posted late on Thursday on the government's website struck a milder tone, saying opposition would be "by peaceful and legal means without use of force or incitement to violence".
"We will not cling to power," the statement said. "I demand that the revolutionaries, civil society and the senior clerics be given the opportunity to take the necessary decisions to avoid bloodshed and find a solution to the Libyan crisis."
In a boost for the new unity government and its leadership, or Presidential Council, 10 western Libyan towns and cities said they welcomed and supported its arrival.
"The municipalities of the western coast are conscious that this is a critical stage," they said. "We call on all Libyans to be unified in their support for the Government of National Accord."
The new government's seven-member Presidential Council is trying to take control of institutions in Tripoli and to secure the backing of the capital's many armed groups.
An official at the foreign ministry in Tripoli said security forces loyal to the Presidential Council had secured the ministry building and that the minister previously appointed by the National Salvation government had left peacefully.
Tripoli has been mostly calm since the Council members arrived on Wednesday. They travelled to Tripoli by ship after opponents shut down the capital's air space to prevent them from flying in.
Reuters