Libyen
Libyen | AfrikaZIF kompakt
Ein Jahr Operation Irini: erste Lehren, neue Chancen | 03/2021
EUNAVFOR MED Irini: Neue EU-Militäroperation im Mittelmeer | 05/2020
ZIF kompakt spezial | Diese Woche im Sicherheitsrat: UNSMIL | 09/2019
EUNAVFOR MED: Schleuserbekämpfung im Mittelmeer | 08/2015
Verstärkter EU-Einsatz vor Libyen: Ausweitung von EUNAVFOR MED | 06/2016
Aktuelle Einsätze
EUNAVFOR MED IRINI
European Union Military Operation in the Mediterranean
Council Decision: 03/20
Zum Einsatz
AU Mission in Libya
African Union Mission in Libya
Mandatiert seit: 02/20
EUBAM Libya
European Union Border Assistance Mission in Libya (EU)
Mandatiert seit: 05/13
Zum Einsatz
UNSMIL
United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UN-geführt)
Mandatiert seit: 09/11
Zum Einsatz
News
Libya's Parliament-appointed prime minister, Fathi Bashagha, discussed with U.S. senior officials efforts to hold timely and transparent elections and to "establish economic and political security," he said in a tweet early on Wednesday.
In its two years of operation to date the European Union (EU) Naval Force (NavFor) Mediterranean Operation Irini investigated over 6 200 ships, conducted 250 plus “friendly approaches” and inspected 22 suspect vessels.
Rival Libyan officials began talks Wednesday in the Egyptian capital on disputed constitutional arrangements for their country’s elections. The UN-brokered talks come as the North African nation is increasingly deadlocked.
The UN Advisor, Stephanie Williams, said that she had received a positive response from the Speaker of the House of Representatives (HoR), Aqila Saleh, as he welcomed the initiative of the UN, adding that the situation now is only a matter of bringing the HoR and High Council of State (HCS) together, and then launching negotiations.
The UN Libya mission said consultative meetings with legislators about election rules would start on Tuesday even though the eastern-based parliament has not yet named members to a joint committee on the subject.
Discord about how to resolve a political impasse has once more put Libya in danger of fracturing in two. The priorities are for the camps to agree on a way forward and for outside powers to stay united in backing whatever peaceful option Libyans choose.
Amid a political impasse that threatens to see Libya fractured again by two parallel governments, the priority must be maintaining hard-won gains and fulfilling the electoral aspirations of nearly three million registered voters, the UN political affairs chief told the Security Council on Wednesday.
Libya’s parliament-appointed Prime Minister Fathi Bashagha said that armed groups backing him have withdrawn from positions around Tripoli, after the UN warned of a new escalation in the divided country.
Libya's parliament rejects any "interference" in its work, its speaker told the UN envoy on Monday after she had offered to mediate in a push for elections.
The Libyan Prime Minister of the Government of National Unity, Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, told Thursday the UNSMIL in a letter explaining his plan for the upcoming period of Libya’s political process that his government will not leave until it holds parliamentary elections on June 30, 2022; no matter what the challenges are.