FM Stresses Need for ‘Foreign Forces’ to Quit Libya

Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush. (AFP)
Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush. (AFP)
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FM Stresses Need for ‘Foreign Forces’ to Quit Libya

Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush. (AFP)
Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush. (AFP)

Libyan Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush has stressed the need for “foreign forces” to withdraw from her country.

During a press conference with her Italian counterpart in Rome on Thursday, she called on “illegitimate foreign military forces” to leave Libya in a way that allows for holding elections in secure conditions. Elections are set for December.

She urged the need to activate the outcomes of the Berlin conference to review the means to implement the ceasefire in Libya.

Mangoush’s reference to foreign fighters has been understood as mercenaries, not Turkish and Italian forces that are active in Libya.

She made her remarks shortly after Italian military officials confirmed that their forces will remain in the North African country as part of the bilateral cooperation with the new Government of National Unity (GNU), headed by Abdulhamid Dbeibeh.

Separately, the Libyan National Army (LNA), commanded by Khalifa Haftar carried out an air surveillance operation along the Libyan border with Chad in wake of the death of the neighboring country’s president Idriss Déby following injuries sustained during clashes with rebels last week.

Head of the Presidential Council Mohammed al-Menfi had traveled to Chad on Friday to attend his funeral.

The LNA did not release an official statement over the surveillance operation, but commander of the al-Kafra military zone said that forces were on alert to deter any possible instability in the area.



4 Tunisia Women Jailed for Buying Candidate Endorsements

Tunisia's Election Commission holds a meeting. Photo: Commission website
Tunisia's Election Commission holds a meeting. Photo: Commission website
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4 Tunisia Women Jailed for Buying Candidate Endorsements

Tunisia's Election Commission holds a meeting. Photo: Commission website
Tunisia's Election Commission holds a meeting. Photo: Commission website

Tunisia has sentenced four women to jail after convicting them of buying signatures of endorsement for a would-be challenger to President Kais Saied in upcoming elections, a court spokesman said Friday.

Candidate registration for the October 6 presidential election began on Monday and closes at 5:00 pm (1600 GMT) next Tuesday, AFP reported.

Saied critics from across the political spectrum have complained that new, tougher endorsement requirements are making it nearly impossible to get on the ballot paper.

To be listed, candidates are required to provide signatures from 10,000 registered voters, with at least 500 voter signatures per constituency.

"The court sentenced three women to two-year sentences, which they began serving immediately, and another, who was tried in absentia, to four years," said Alaeddine Aouadi, spokesman for the court in the northwestern town of Jendouba.

At Wednesday's hearing, the four women were also deprived of their right to vote for 10 years, Aouadi said.

The women were convicted of handing over "money or gifts in kind" in exchange for voter endorsements for rapper turned businessman Karim Gharbi, better known by his stage name K2Rhym.