Libya may become ‘next Syria,’ warns foreign minister

Libya, torn by a growing political divide that threatens to engulf its oilfields, could become the next Syria, Foreign Minister Mohamed Dayri said.

Libya, torn by a growing political divide that threatens to engulf its oilfields, could become the next Syria, Foreign Minister Mohamed Dayri said.

Libya, torn by a growing political divide that threatens to engulf its oilfields, could become the next Syria if it does not patch its divided government and get help battling Islamic militants, the country’s foreign minister said on Tuesday, according to Reuters news agency.

“If we don’t do the right thing now, in two years’ time we could have – hopefully not – a repeat of what happened in Syria in 2014 because the international community didn’t react adequately,” Foreign Minister Mohamed Dayri said.

Dayri represents the internationally recognized government in eastern Libya, which is locked in an increasingly violent struggle for power with a rival faction, known as Libya Dawn that seized control in the capital of Tripoli in August.

Dayri repeated his government believes that forces attacking the oil facilities included elements of Ansar al-Sharia.

The United States has designated Ansar al-Sharia as a terrorist group and accuses it of involvement in the deadly September 2012 attack on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya.

Asked whether he was worried that Libya was not high on the list of U.S. President Barack Obama’s priorities, the foreign minister said, “I do worry about that.”

He said he spoke to a United Nations session in New York on Friday and met with officials in Washington to “draw the international community’s attention to the rising threats of international terrorism in Libya and the need to fight it.”

Dayri said the eastern-based government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thani faces what he called “a serious financial crunch, funding crunch” and may seek international loans.

Al-Thani’s’ government does not have access to oil revenues routed to the Central Bank in Tripoli.

“We can get loans, and this is what we may be seeking to achieve in the coming days and weeks,” Dayri said, adding that he held discussions at the World Bank and International Monetary Fund on Monday night.

Also on Tuesday, the U.N. Special Envoy for Libya, Bernadino Leon, informed the U.N. Security Council that the rival factions in Libya have agreed in principle to hold a new round of peace talks early in the new year.

Dayri said his government remains committed to the peace talks, adding: “It goes without saying that the process will be difficult.”


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