ToolTip PluginAdvertisers

U.S. should not stand in way of U.N. chief naming new Libya envoy, Germany says (Reuters)

Start Date: Thursday, July 30, 2020

Last Modified: Monday, August 3, 2020

End Date: Friday, December 31, 9999


NEW YORK (Reuters) - The United States should not stop United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres from naming a new U.N. Libya envoy to replace Ghassan Salame who quit nearly five months ago, Germany's U.N. Ambassador Christoph Heusgen said on Thursday.



Salame, who headed the U.N. political mission and was charged with trying to mediate peace, quit because of stress after his last effort at peacemaking in the war-torn, oil producing country failed.


The United States now wants to split the role to have one person run the U.N. mission - known as UNSMIL - and another person focus on mediating peace in Libya, diplomats said.


"There have been questions raised by our U.S. partners with regard to the structure of UNSMIL. We believe that, yes, you can discuss that, but ... the U.S. shouldn't stop the Secretary-General nominating a successor to Ghassan Salame," Heusgen told reporters.


The U.N. Security Council traditionally greenlights such appointments by consensus, but some of the 15 members are not in favor of the U.S. proposal to split the role, diplomats said.


Guterres has suggested former Ghana foreign minister and current U.N. envoy to the African Union, Hanna Tetteh, replace Salame and Washington has said it can support her nomination after Guterres appoints a special mediator, diplomats said.


The United States had proposed former Danish Prime Minister Helle Thorning-Schmidt to be special envoy, but diplomats said she had withdrawn herself and Washington is now looking for a new candidate.


Libya descended into chaos after the NATO-backed overthrow of leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. Since 2014, it has been split, with an internationally recognized government controlling the capital, Tripoli, and the northwest, while military leader Khalifa Haftar in Benghazi rules the east.


Haftar is supported by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia, while the government is backed by Turkey. Guterres has warned that there were "unprecedented levels" of foreign interference and mercenaries in the oil-producing country. 

This is news coming in via RDF/XML

InfoDesk

en

This message contains open source media content that has not been analyzed or edited by the Operations Center.  

Roles:

Everyone: All Users
NewsNavigation #NewsModule U.S. should not stand in way of U.N. chief naming new Libya envoy, Germany says (Reuters)Generic Enhanced N
       <b>CROSSWALKS (This Advertisement shows 08 Related Records (From All Modules) - vertical column right (of record view)</b> (The Logic is Filtering by Region, Subject, Program and Glossary)Advertisers
#Set Active Nav - Content TypesAdvertisers
Form JS: Remove max-width on form elements & Autocomplete Off Date PickersAdvertisers
<b>Yellow Highlighting of Module Details View: Keyword Searched Value<b>Advertisers
U.S. State Department Design (CSS and related styles records)Styles AF — African AffairsAudience Advertisers Sponsored Keywords Splash Pages
visual editor / client console / x close editor
Module Designer
Children of this Page
Taxonomy
Dynamic Scripts
Advertising
Site Design & Layout