TR Libya Operations & Updates

Lool

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Saithan

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Do you know the demographics of the ppl who voted?
Like where most of them are.... etc!
And are only these 2.8 million ppl the ones who will vote in the election?
Sorry. I have not been able to find out which areas registered. However I think it's smart to register who wants to vote considering it's another step to reduce fraud and such. It would have been interesting to see how many in east and west signed up.

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Also this article:
 

Lool

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Sorry. I have not been able to find out which areas registered. However I think it's smart to register who wants to vote considering it's another step to reduce fraud and such. It would have been interesting to see how many in east and west signed up.

View attachment 28431


Also this article:
Nah its fine
Its just that considering how Confident General Haftar recently was, Iam quite sure that the election is rigged one way or another behind the scenes tbh

I mean a majority of the 2.8 million voters may be in the East. If that is true, then they will be forced one way or another to vote for Haftar. Or they may change the results while counting
For example, if 1.6 million are in the east, then Haftar may say I won by 1.5 million and just win the election by ease
 
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Saithan

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Libyan army rejects freezing of GNA-Turkey agreements​

BY DAILY SABAH​

ANKARA POLITICS
AUG 18, 2021 11:34 AM GMT+3
Defense Minister Hulusi Akar together with Libyan Chief of General Staff Muhammed Ali Haddad in Istanbul, Turkey, Aug. 17, 2021 (AA Photo)
Defense Minister Hulusi Akar together with Libyan Chief of General Staff Muhammed Ali Haddad in Istanbul, Turkey, Aug. 17, 2021 (AA Photo)



The Libyan army rejected the demand by the 5+5 joint military committee on Tuesday that agreements signed by the previous legitimate government be frozen, including one signed with Turkey.

The commander of Western Military Zone's Joint Operations Room, Maj. Gen. Osama Juwaili stated on social media that "Agreements with Turkey were requested by the legitimate GNA (Government of National Accord) to help repel the offensive on Tripoli, while Russia and other countries that have troops on the ground in Libya have no legitimate agreements with the government."

On Nov. 27, 2019, the internationally recognized Libyan government signed a security cooperation agreement and demarcation of a maritime border with Turkey.

The Turkey-Libya deal on maritime delimitation has provided a legal framework to prevent any fait accompli by regional states. Accordingly, the attempts by the Greek government to appropriate huge parts of Libya's continental shelf, since a political crisis hit the North African country in 2011, have been averted.

The agreement also confirmed that Turkey and Libya are maritime neighbors. The delimitation starts from Turkey’s southwestern coast of Fethiye-Marmaris-Kaş and extends to the Derna-Tobruk-Bordia coastline of Libya.

Furthermore, within the scope of the security agreement, Turkey has started providing military training to Libyan soldiers.

Turkey had backed the internationally recognized Tripoli-based GNA, against the eastern-based forces of putschist Gen. Khalifa Haftar, which was supported by Russia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates (UAE) and France.

Selected through a United Nations-led process, Libya’s new interim government, the Government of National Unity (GNU), was sworn in on March 15, created from two rival political groups that had ruled eastern and western regions, completing a smooth transition of power after a decade of violent chaos.

The new interim government, led by Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Mohammed Dbeibah, will lead the country to elections in December.

Meanwhile, Defense Minister Hulusi Akar met with Libyan Chief of General Staff Muhammed Ali Haddad on Tuesday on the sidelines of the International Defense Industry Fair (IDEF 2021) in Istanbul.

Akar and Haddad discussed regional and bilateral security issues while Akar reiterated Turkey's support for the country.

 

TheInsider

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Maybe the US is luring Haftar into a trap. You will never know what those sneaky bastards will be cooking up.
 

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TheInsider

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They clearly stated that they want to expel Turkey from Libya.
Yeah, I see that. That is what I found fishy. If TR goes away Russia will be the sole winner. I don't think the US wants that. The US wants both TR and Russia to lose their positions. What those sneaky bastards want from those two sides to fight a bloody war and one of the sides comes crying to the US and be their lapdog. What the US wants from GNA to kick TR and from LNA to kick the Russians.

The thing is if GNA kicks us out Haftar will conquer Tripoli with the Russian forces. If Haftar kicks the Russian forces, GNA will conquer Haftars side with Turkish backing. So as the US, first you need to make them fight, if one side loses, the losing side will agree to the demands of the US after that the US will step in as a mediator and stop the hostilities and put his man in charge and make everybody to agree to the demands of the US.
 
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UN warns Libyan parties to refrain from military moves​

BY DAILY SABAH​

ANKARA AFRICA
AUG 20, 2021 11:04 AM GMT+3
Libyan security officers run a checkpoint to verify the implementation of a total curfew the authorities announced a day earlier to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, in the capital Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 7, 2021. (AFP Photo)
Libyan security officers run a checkpoint to verify the implementation of a total curfew the authorities announced a day earlier to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, in the capital Tripoli, Libya, Aug. 7, 2021. (AFP Photo)



The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) has warned rival parties in Libya to refrain from any military mobilization that could obstruct the North African country’s path toward elections in December.

The UNSMIL in a written statement shared on Twitter Thursday urged all parties to “refrain from any mobilization or deployment of security elements and troops that may be perceived as an escalation and may undermine the implementation of the Oct. 23, 2020, cease-fire agreement.”

It further urged all parties to respect the lines of demarcation as they were at the time of the signing of the cease-fire agreement.
Libya, home to some 7 million people, has made tentative steps since last summer toward ending a decade of violent fragmentation initially sparked by the overthrow of dictator Moammar Gadhafi in 2011.

A U.N.-brokered cease-fire signed in October between warring eastern and western camps has largely held.

Parallel political negotiations have installed a transitional government tasked with leading the country toward national elections set for Dec. 24.
But despite months of relative peace, Libyans remain at odds over when the elections should be held, which elections and on what legal basis.
Libya has been without a constitution since Gadhafi scrapped it in 1969.

The 75 delegates selected by the U.N. to guide the political transition have yet to agree on a constitutional basis for the December polls.

The same deal inked in October also stipulated that all foreign forces and mercenaries – which support different sides in the conflict – withdraw from Libya within three months, a provision that has not been met. The U.N. has frequently voiced that the presence of mercenaries is a threat to peace and stability in Libya.

Meanwhile, Russia's top diplomat assured his Libyan counterpart Thursday that Moscow supports the withdrawal of all foreign fighters from the North African country and is prepared to help work out the details with other countries.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said after the talks in Moscow with Najla Mangoush that the Libyan leadership “is forming a consultative mechanism ... to formulate the concrete parameters” under which the foreign forces will leave.

Russia was among the foreign powers backing the warring sides in Libya’s conflict, with some officials and media reports alleging that Russian private military contractors took part in the fighting.

"We will be prepared to constructively take part in this work alongside other countries,” Lavrov told a press conference.

The Libyan foreign minister said her government considers the issue of withdrawing foreign fighters “important” and “a priority,” but stressed that it should be done gradually and “in a synchronized manner."

“That's why working out implementation mechanisms is necessary," Mangoush said. "Such decisions are aimed to avoid repeating (the) negative lessons of some of our neighbors, to avoid an ill-considered withdrawal of troops and to avoid sliding into chaos, so that the national security of Libya doesn't suffer in the end,” she explained.

 

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