A technical meeting was held yesterday, Tuesday, in Tunis, in an attempt to reach an international agreement to resolve the Libyan crisis.
The meeting witnessed the presence of three Western diplomats who are members of the UN Security Council and have the right of veto, namely France, Britain and the United States of America, along with Italy and Germany, the most two countries involved in the Libyan file, along with Turkey and Egypt, the two main countries that are leading the two opposing fronts in Libya, where Ankara supports the National Unity Government in Tripoli led by Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh, while Cairo supports the head of the National Stability Government, Fathi Bashagha, who was commissioned by the Libyan House of Representatives to form a government last February.
Diplomatic sources in Tunisia said that the participants agreed on the “necessity of negotiation between the two sides and overcoming the crisis between the executive directors.”
Adapted from Nova Agency