Friday, 15 July 2011
Contact Group Recognizes Libya Revolutionists
Revolutionist leaders won recognition as the legitimate government of Libya from the United States and other world powers on Friday in a major boost to the fighters’ faltering campaign to oust long-time ruler Muammar Gaddafi.
The Libya contact group recognized the National Transitional Council (NTC) as the country's "legitimate governmental authority," according to a statement seen by AFP.
The group of major Western and regional powers also urged "all relevant parties" to make efforts "for the formation of an interim government to ensure a smooth and peaceful transition of power," said the statement, to be formally issued at the end of a meeting in Istanbul later Friday.
It urged Gaddafi, hanging on in Tripoli despite almost four months of NATO-led bombings, to step down. Gaddafi "must leave power according to defined steps to be publicly announced," said the statement, distributed by one delegation at the talks.
A number of countries have already unilaterally recognized the NTC, based in the revolutionists’ stronghold of Benghazi, as Libya's legitimate representative. The contact group's recognition "means that we can now unfreeze certain Libyan state assets because it is the NTC that will henceforth exercise this responsibility," French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe told reporters.
His Italian counterpart, Franco Frattini, said earlier that the contact group was also set to designate the UN special envoy for Libya, Abdul Ilah al-Khatib, as "the sole interlocutor" between the Gaddafi regime and the revolutionists based in Benghazi. "Mr. al-Khatib is entitled to present a political package including the ceasefire, and to negotiate with Tripoli and Benghazi to form a government of national unity," he said.
The contact group includes the countries participating in the NATO-led campaign targeting Gaddafi’s regime, as well as other regional players.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
The Libya contact group recognized the National Transitional Council (NTC) as the country's "legitimate governmental authority," according to a statement seen by AFP.
The group of major Western and regional powers also urged "all relevant parties" to make efforts "for the formation of an interim government to ensure a smooth and peaceful transition of power," said the statement, to be formally issued at the end of a meeting in Istanbul later Friday.
It urged Gaddafi, hanging on in Tripoli despite almost four months of NATO-led bombings, to step down. Gaddafi "must leave power according to defined steps to be publicly announced," said the statement, distributed by one delegation at the talks.
A number of countries have already unilaterally recognized the NTC, based in the revolutionists’ stronghold of Benghazi, as Libya's legitimate representative. The contact group's recognition "means that we can now unfreeze certain Libyan state assets because it is the NTC that will henceforth exercise this responsibility," French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe told reporters.
His Italian counterpart, Franco Frattini, said earlier that the contact group was also set to designate the UN special envoy for Libya, Abdul Ilah al-Khatib, as "the sole interlocutor" between the Gaddafi regime and the revolutionists based in Benghazi. "Mr. al-Khatib is entitled to present a political package including the ceasefire, and to negotiate with Tripoli and Benghazi to form a government of national unity," he said.
The contact group includes the countries participating in the NATO-led campaign targeting Gaddafi’s regime, as well as other regional players.
River to Sea Uprooted Palestinian
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