Egypt calls for NATO support in Libya ‘vacuum’

Egypt signed a 5.2 billion-euro deal in February to buy French weaponry, an agreement for 24 Rafale combat jets made by Dassault Aviation, a multi-mission naval frigate, and air-to-air missiles.

Egypt signed a 5.2 billion-euro deal in February to buy French weaponry, an agreement for 24 Rafale combat jets made by Dassault Aviation, a multi-mission naval frigate, and air-to-air missiles.


Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi called for NATO powers to help rebuild Libya, beset by violence since an uprising backed by the Western military alliance toppled leader Muammar Qaddafii, in an interview.

Sisi was quoted in British newspaper the Daily Telegraph ahead of a visit to London in which he is to discuss security co-operation with Prime Minister David Cameron.

“Libya is a danger that threatens all of us. If there is no government then this only creates a vacuum where extremists can prosper,” Sisi said, according to the Telegraph.

“It was a mission that was not completely accomplished… We must support all efforts to help the Libyan people and the Libyan economy.”

Libya has descended into chaos since longtime dictator Qaddafi was ousted in 2011 and killed in the midst of an uprising supported by NATO states.

Chronic insecurity, with armed groups battling to control its energy resources and two governments vying for power, has made Libya a key launching point for people smugglers feeding Europe’s migrant crisis by sending boatloads of people across the Mediterranean.

“We need to stop the flow of funds and weapons and foreign fighters to the extremists. All the members of NATO – including Britain – who took part in the mission to overthrow Qaddafi need to give their help,” Sisi said.

It is Sisi’s first visit to Britain since his 2013 toppling of Egypt’s first freely elected civilian leader Mohammad Mursi, whose divisive 12-month rule had drawn mass protests.

In the interview, Sisi dismissed claims that a Russian airliner that crashed in Egypt’s Sinai Peninsula could have been brought down by a missile or bomb as “unfounded speculation”.

He also criticized Western efforts to combat ISIS militants in Iraq and Syria, according to the Telegraph, saying: “The map of extremism and instability is expanding and not retreating. We need to reassess our priorities.”


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