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Egypt Says it Will Host 'Reorganization' of Libyan Army

by Associated Press

   CAIRO --

   Egypt said Tuesday it will host the reorganization of Libya's army,
   currently an eastern-based force led by Gen. Khalifa Hifter.
   A statement signed by the Egyptian Committee on Libya said that Libyan
   military officers who met in Cairo recently chose Egypt as a starting
   point for plans to unify the army.
   The group, chaired by Egypt's chief of staff, Lt. Gen. Mahmoud Hegazy,
   didn't say which officials took part in the meeting, or provide further
   details.
   A Libyan officer welcomed the initiative, thanking the Egyptian army
   "for facilitating such an opportunity for army officers to meet and
   find common ground."
   "The army is open to discussion with all parties excluding terrorist
   organizations," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he
   wasn't authorized to brief reporters. "The army doesn't recognize any
   unofficial armed group but has opened discussions in the hope that
   militias will disband and join as individuals."
   Libya sank into chaos following the 2011 uprising that toppled and
   killed dictator Moammar Gadhafi. It is split between rival parliaments,
   governments and militias in the east and west, but in late July its
   rival leaders pledged to cooperate. Egypt has backed Hifter in his
   conflict with the Tripoli government and associated militias.
   The Egyptian statement said the Libyan officers pledge to maintain
   Libya's territorial integrity and create a modern and inclusive, civil
   democratic state based on a peaceful transfer of power.
   Instability and banditry in the oil-rich country has turned it into a
   haven for people trafficking and migration to Europe.
   Italy last month reached a verbal agreement with the country's western
   government, led by the internationally recognized but weak Fayez
   Serraj, to provide equipment, boats and salaries to militias working to
   stop the flow of migrants.
   The U.N. Security Council has unanimously approved a resolution
   welcoming recent efforts to bring opposing sides together, with
   Secretary General Antonio Guterres saying that the time is right for
   mediation to restore peace.