Tunisia’s President Saied visits Libya to support the democratic path

Saied's office said the visit is to support the democratic path in Libya, which aims to hold national elections in December in a bid to end its decade-long conflict

Tunisia’s President Kais Saied is to travel to Libya Wednesday for the first visit by a head of state between the neighboring countries since 2012, his office announced, in a boost for its new UN-backed administration.

Saied’s visit aims to show “Tunisia’s support for the democratic process in Libya” following the swearing in on Monday of new interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah on a pledge to reunite the divided country and lead it to December elections, the president’s office said.

The statement did not specify who Saied would meet.

Before Libya’s decent into chaos following the 2011 overthrow of veteran dictator Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising, oil-rich Libya was a major customer for Tunisian farm produce and building materials as well as migrant labour.

Tunisia hosted UN-backed talks between representatives of Libya’s warring factions late last year that helped pave the way for the breakthrough.

The long years of conflict have resulted in prolonged border closures that have hit the volume of business, particularly in the informal trade in consumer goods that is an economic mainstay in border areas.

The common front fell apart briefly last year when the current Tunisian president accused the Islamist Ennahda party, which forms the largest bloc in parliament, of being too close to the authorities in western Libya in their Turkish-backed war against Khalifa Haftar’s Libyan National Army (LNA).

Successive Tunisian governments strove to avoid publicly taking sides between Libya’s rival administrations in the east and west that fought themselves to a bloody standstill before making way this week for the new UN-backed unity government led by Dbeibah.

 

Arab Observer

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