Egypt called Wednesday on the United Nations to lift an arms embargo
on Libya as Cairo pushes for greater international efforts to combat
jihadists in its war-torn neighbour.
In talks in New York ahead of a UN Security Council meeting, Foreign
Minister Sameh Shoukry told fellow diplomats that Libya’s
internationally recognised government needed to be better armed to take
on Islamist militias who have seized large parts of the country.
Sameh is calling on the Security Council to “assume its
responsibilities in regards to the deteriorating situation in Libya” and
to “reconsider the restrictions imposed on the Libyan government on
arms deliveries,” the ministry said in a statement.
He also “underlined the need to allow countries in the region… to
support the Libyan government’s efforts to impose its authority and
restore stability”.
Egypt is seeking UN backing for concerted international action after
it launched air strikes on Islamic State group targets in Libya in
response the jihadists beheading a group of Egyptian Christians.
Libya’s internationally recognised government claims its efforts to
control the country have been hobbled by a UN arms embargo imposed at
the start of the 2011 uprising that ousted and killed dictator Moamer
Kadhafi.
Libya has since descended into chaos, with the government forced to
flee to the country’s east and Islamist-linked militias in control of
Tripoli and other main cities.
Shoukry, who the ministry said had met with the UN envoys of the five
permanent members of the Security Council, also called for steps to be
taken “to prevent armed and terrorist groups from obtaining weapons
illegally.
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