You are here

Region

Region section

Turkey, Egypt hold first diplomatic contacts since 2013

By - Mar 14,2021 - Last updated at Mar 14,2021

ANKARA — Turkey on Friday said it had established its first diplomatic contacts with Egypt since 2013 and was ready to improve relations with other rivals as it seeks to break its isolation.

Ankara and Cairo had a dramatic falling out since the ouster of the Turkish-backed Islamist leader Mohamed Morsi.

The two regional powers have since sparred over a range of issues and found themselves on opposite sides of the war in Libya.

But Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has been extending olive branches to his rivals in the face of potential sanctions from the European Union and a tough new diplomatic line from US President Joe Biden.

Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu first signalled earlier this month that Ankara was prepared to negotiate a new maritime agreement for the eastern Mediterranean with Cairo.

He told Turkish state media on Friday that the two countries have now made "contacts both at the level of intelligence and foreign ministries with Egypt".

Erdogan later told reporters that he wanted these initial discussion to lay the groundwork for possible talks with Sisi.

“Our desire would be to extend this process and strengthen it much more,” Erdogan said after attending Friday prayers in Istanbul.

“Therefore, after these intelligence, diplomatic and political contacts yield result, we will take this to much higher levels.”

 

‘Principle of sovereignty’ 

 

However an Egyptian official on Friday denied in comments to local media any resumption in high-level talks and pointed out that both countries already have diplomatic missions at the level of charge d’affaires.

“Upgrading the relationship between Egypt and Turkey requires taking into account the legal and diplomatic frameworks that goven relations between countries on the basis of respecting the principle of sovereignty and the requirements of Arab national security,” the unnamed official added.

Emerging markets economist Timothy Ash of BlueBay Asset Management said Turkey’s shift on Egypt represented “an absolutely incredible turnaround for Erdogan”.

“Shows the new world order under Biden, or a return to something more familiar,” Ash said in a note.

Turkey and Egypt expelled each others’ ambassadors and downgraded their relations in 2013.

Erdogan has repeatedly referred to Sisi as a “putchist president” he holds responsible for the deaths of thousands of civilians.

But the strong-willed Turkish leader has said little about Sisi of late while toning down his language on a range of international affairs.

Turkey’s resumption of talks with Egypt could potentially worry Greece.

Athens last year signed a maritime agreement with Cairo that laid claim to some eastern Mediterranean waters covered in a separate pact Turkey struck with Libya around the same time.

Turkey and Greece resumed the first direct talks over the dispute in nearly five years in Istanbul in January and are set to continue them next Tuesday in Athens.

 

‘No problems’ 

 

Cavusoglu said on Friday that Turkey was also ready to improve relations with the United Arab Emirates — one of its biggest rivals in the Arab world — as well as Saudi Arabia.

“We have been seeing more positive messages lately from Abu Dhabi,” he said.

“We have had no problems with them anyway, but they have had a problem with us. We are now seeing a more moderate approach from them.”

Turkey’s relations with Saudi Arabia deteriorated sharply after the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in Riyadh’s Istanbul consulate in 2018.

But Cavusoglu said on Friday that Turkey was not treating the death as a “bilateral issue”.

“We see no reason not to improve relations with Saudi Arabia,” he added.

A Turkish court trying 26 Saudi suspects in absentia for Khashoggi’s murder this month refused to admit a US report blaming the kingdom’s Prince Mohammed Bin Salman for the killing.

The declassified US report said Washington had grounds to conclude that Prince Mohammed “approved” the operations since it fit a pattern of him “using violent measures to silence dissidents abroad”.

Ancient Christian ruins discovered in Egypt

By - Mar 14,2021 - Last updated at Mar 14,2021

CAIRO — A French-Norwegian archaeological team has discovered new Christian ruins in Egypt’s Western Desert, revealing monastic life in the region in the fifth century AD, the Egyptian antiquities ministry said on Saturday.

The mission unearthed “several buildings made of basalt, others carved into the bedrock and some made of mud bricks”, during its third excavation campaign at the Tal Ganoub Qasr Al Agouz site in the Bahariya Oasis, the ministry said in a statement.

The complex is comprised of “six sectors containing the ruins of three churches and monks’ cells”, whose “walls bear graffiti and symbols with Coptic connotations”, said Osama Talaat, head of Islamic, Coptic and Jewish Antiquities at the ministry.

Mission head Victor Ghica said “19 structures and a church carved into the bedrock” were discovered last year.

The church walls were decorated with “religious inscriptions” and biblical passages in Greek, revealing “the nature of monastic life in the region”, Ghica said, according to the statement.

It clearly showed that monks were present there since the fifth century AD, he said, adding that the discovery helped understand “the development of buildings and the formation of the first monastic communities” in this region of Egypt.

The remote site, located in the desert southwest of the capital Cairo, was occupied from the fourth to eighth centuries, with a likely peak of activity around the fifth and sixth centuries, according to the French Institute of Oriental Archaeology (IFAO), in charge of the mission.

Previous excavations undertaken in 2009 and 2013 shed light on subjects including “the production and preservation of wine as well as the husbandry of animals” in a monastic context, according to the IFAO.

Cairo has announced several major new archaeological discoveries in recent months with the hopes of spurring tourism, a sector that has suffered multiple blows, from a 2011 uprising to the coronavirus pandemic.

In February, it said a high-production brewery believed to be more than 5,000 years old had been uncovered at a funerary site in the country’s south.

Also last month, an Egyptian-Dominican archaeological mission working near Alexandria said it had discovered mummies from around 2,000 years ago bearing golden-tongued amulets.

In January, Egypt unveiled ancient treasures found at the Saqqara archaeological site south of Cairo, including sarcophagi over 3,000 years old, in a discovery that “rewrites history”, according to famed Egyptologist Zahi Hawass.

UN urges Somalia elections, extends peacekeeping mission

By - Mar 14,2021 - Last updated at Mar 14,2021

UNITED NATIONS, United States — The UN Security Council on Friday adopted a resolution extending the mandate of the African Union peacekeeping mission in Somalia until December, and called on Somali authorities to hold elections “without further delay”.

The 13-page text drafted by Britain was unanimously approved by the 15 members of the Council, diplomatic sources said.

It had proven difficult to finalise due to differences in the past month between Western countries and the African members of the council, including Kenya, Niger and Tunisia, who had even forced London to postpone the vote for 15 days.

The question of funding for the African Union force, known as Amisom, was one of the points of contention.

After the result of the vote was announced, Niger issued, in the name of the African member states, a long and critical statement on how the negotiations were conducted by Britain, which it said had ignored some of their concerns.

“Some of our proposals were rejected without any convincing explanation or none at all,” said Abdou Abarry, the ambassador for Niger.

He said that “the final text does not reflect the positions of the African Union”.

Somalia missed a deadline to hold an election by February 8, when President Mohamed Abdullahi Mohamed, better known by his nickname Farmajo, was due to step down, sparking a constitutional crisis in the already-fragile state.

Farmajo and Somalia’s five regional leaders reached an agreement on September 17 that abandoned a promised one-person, one-vote ballot but offered a common path forward for elections.

 

Tunisia starts COVID vaccinations month behind plan

By - Mar 14,2021 - Last updated at Mar 14,2021

A nurse holds a vial of Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 coronavirus vaccine at a vaccination clinic in a hospital in Tunisia’s capital Tunis, on Saturday (AFP photo)

TUNIS — Tunisia launched its coronavirus vaccination campaign on Saturday, a month later than planned, with health professionals first in line, AFP correspondents reported.

Around 300 nurses, doctors and other health personnel who are heavily exposed to the virus received shots during the morning at the El Menzah vaccination centre in the capital Tunis.

The country received 30,000 doses of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine on March 9.

This initial delivery is being used to vaccinate 15,000 health professionals, said Abdelmoumen Samir, a doctor who is part of the country’s coronavirus taskforce.

“With the vaccination launch, we are taking a very important step in the fight against this pandemic,” he said.

“We will give a message of hope to Tunisians and encourage them to get vaccinated.”

A further 94,000 vaccines, this time provided by Pfizer/BioNTech, are due to arrive from next week, while jabs produced by AstraZeneca are also to arrive soon, Samir said.

“We are going to be much less stressed when we approach a coronavirus patient,” said Jalila Khelil, head of the intensive care unit at the Abderrahmen Memmi Hospital. “Even if we catch the virus, we will suffer much less severe symptoms.”

A new variant of the virus is circulating in Tunisia, but initial analysis does not show it to be more dangerous or virulent than the original strain, according to the Pasteur Institute.

Tunisia, which has a population of 11.7 million, is the last country in the Maghreb region to launch its vaccination campaign.

Morocco and Algeria launched their drives in late January.

Confirmed deaths from the virus in Tunisia are currently running in the dozens per day, while total detected cases since the start of the pandemic stand at over 240,500, of whom more than 8,300 have died.

 

Activists in race to save digital trace of Syria war

By - Mar 13,2021 - Last updated at Mar 13,2021

People rally as they mark the 10th anniversary of the start of the war in Syria, on Saturday, in Istanbul (AFP photo)

By Hashem Osseiran
Agence France-Presse

BEIRUT — From videos of deadly air strikes to extremist takeovers, Al Mutez Billah’s YouTube page served as a digital archive of the Syrian war until automated takedown software in 2017 erased it permanently.

The page exhibiting footage that violated YouTube’s community standards could not be restored because Al Mutez Billah, a citizen-journalist, had been executed by the Daesh group three years earlier over his documentation efforts.

“It’s not just videos that have been deleted, it’s an entire archive of our life,” said Sarmad Jilane, a Syrian activist and close friend of Al Mutez Billah, who was killed at the age of 21.

“Effectively, it feels like a part of our visual memory has been erased.”

The Google-owned YouTube platform has deleted hundreds of thousands of videos uploaded by Syrian activists since it introduced automated software in 2017 to detect and delete objectionable content, including violent or graphic videos.

It is not the only social media giant relying on artificial intelligence takedowns, but the platform is home to the majority of Syria war footage, making it an even bigger blow.

The videos showing regime bombardments, executions by extremists and chemical attacks had served as a vital window into a conflict which has remained largely off limits to journalists and investigators and was captured mostly by the people living it.

With the war entering its 11th year, there is growing concern that digital evidence of history’s most documented conflict is being syphoned away by the Internet’s indiscriminate trash can.

“The videos are part of an entire population’s memory,” Jilane said.

“Every clip helps us remember things like what shells were fired that day, the date of the event, or even how we were feeling at the time,” the activist told AFP over the phone from Germany.

Jilane is one of the founders of Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently, a renowned activist-run page that documented abuses by terrorists from the so-called Daesh group.

Four years ago, YouTube deleted the page’s account but it has since been restored with the help of the Syrian Archive — a group working to preserve the conflict’s digital footprint.

 

‘Bleeding-out’

 

The Syrian Archive has helped restore more than 650,000 YouTube videos removed since 2017, but that is only a fraction of deleted content.

“There is a real feel among people who do open-source investigation that Syrian history is being erased by machine-learning technology,” said Dia Kayyali of the parent company Mnemonic.

“It is a steady and ongoing bleeding-out of this body of evidence.”

To get a sense of how much content is being removed, the Syrian Archive compares videos available online against those collected on its servers.

Almost a quarter of its collection is no longer available on YouTube, Kayyali said.

The situation is set to worsen as global powers ramp up pressure on social media giants to curb terror content online.

In December, EU lawmakers reached a provisional agreement on tougher regulations, including an obligation that platforms take down offending material within an hour.

If enforced, this would make preservation all the more difficult.

“As soon as we find things, we archive them,” Kayyali said.

“But we can’t keep up with the technology, it’s specifically designed to be much faster than human beings,” the expert added.

“Right now, it’s really a race against time.”

YouTube usually relies on a mix of automated software and human reviewers to flag and delete problematic videos.

But the coronavirus pandemic has forced it to lean more on artificial intelligence as it reduces “in-office staffing”, according to its latest transparency report.

This “means we are removing more content that may not be violative of our policies”, it said.

But “when it’s brought to our attention that a video or channel has been removed mistakenly, we act quickly to reinstate it”, a YouTube spokesperson told AFP.

 

‘Destroying evidence’ 

 

Despite the erasures, countless hours of Syria content survive.

“We have more footage of the Syrian war than the length of the conflict itself,” said Nick Waters of the open-source investigation website Bellingcat.

Bellingcat has gained prominence as a pillar of open-source intelligence since it started using videos and images to probe the use of weapons in Syria’s war, which has claimed more than 380,000 lives.

Rights groups have also used open-source information to investigate chemical weapon use in Syria.

“User-generated content is very good at establishing certain things: What happened, where and when,” Waters said.

“It’s less good in terms of the why and sometimes the whom.”

Experts believe social media evidence could potentially play a future role in Syria prosecutions.

Its use in court is still being developed, Waters said, but its added value should not be overlooked.

“Each one of these videos or images potentially shows a piece of history,” the open-source analyst told AFP.

“By deleting these videos, especially from accounts of people who may have been killed... these social media giants are effectively destroying evidence.”

Syrian heritage suffered 'cultural apocalypse'

Mar 11,2021 - Last updated at Mar 11,2021


By Maher Al Mounes and Jean-Marc Mojon
Agence France-Presse

PALMYRA, Syria — A decade of war has not only destroyed Syria's present and poisoned its future, it has damaged beyond repair some of its fabled past.

Syria was an archaeologist's paradise, a world heritage home to some of the oldest and best-preserved jewels of ancient civilisations.

The conflict that erupted in 2011 is arguably the worst of the 21st century so far on a humanitarian level, but the wanton destruction of heritage was possibly the worst in generations.

In a few years, archaeological sites were damaged, museums were looted and old city centres were levelled.

Standing in front of a restored artefact in the Palmyra museum he ran for 20 years, Khalil Al Hariri remembers the trauma of having to flee the desert city and its treasures as they fell into the hands of the so-called Daesh group.

"I have lived many difficult days. We were besieged several times in the museum," he said, recounting how he and his team stayed behind as late as possible to ferry artefacts to safety.

"But the most difficult day of my life was the day I returned to Palmyra and saw the broken antiquities and the museum in shambles," said Hariri, now 60 years old.

"They broke and smashed all the faces of statues that remained in the museum and which we could not save. Some of them can be restored, but others have completely crumbled."

'Venice of the Sands' 

Palmyra is a majestic ancient city whose influence peaked towards the end of the Roman Empire and was famously ruled by Queen Zenobia in the 3rd century.

Its imposing kilometre-long colonnade is unique and one of Syria's most recognisable landmarks.

When Daesh terrorists hurtled into Palmyra in May 2015 to expand the "caliphate" they had proclaimed over parts of Syria and Iraq a year earlier, the outcry was global.

The contrast offered by the splendour and prowess of Palmyrene architecture as a backdrop to the barbarity of dishevelled gun-toting militants captured the world's imagination.

The site became a stage for public executions and other gruesome crimes, some of which were pictured and distributed in Daesh propaganda.

The headless body of chief archaeologist Khaled Al Asaad was also displayed there by Daesh henchmen who had tortured him to get him to reveal where the site's artefacts had been transferred.

Bent on their enterprise of cultural genocide, the nihilistic extremists rigged Palmyra's famed shrine of Baal Shamin and blew it up.

They also destroyed the Temple of Bel, blew up the Arch of Triumph, looted what they could from the museum and defaced the statues and sarcophagi that were too large to remove.

The sacking of the ancient city dubbed "The Venice of the Sands" drew comparisons with the destruction by Afghanistan's Taliban of the Bamiyan Buddhas in 2001.

By the time government forces retook control of Palmyra in 2017, it had been irreversibly damaged.

'Complete, utter destruction' 

Palmyra was just one of the irretrievable losses inflicted on Syria's heritage during a war that did not spare a single of the country's regions.

"In two words, it's a cultural apocalypse," said Justin Marozzi, an author and historian who has written extensively on the region and its heritage.

The patrimonial destruction unleashed on Syria in the previous decade harks back to another age, when the Mongol empire founded by Gengis Khan wreaked carnage far and wide.

"When it comes to Syria and the Middle East in particular, I can't help thinking immediately of Timur, or Tamerlane, who unleashed hell here in 1400," said Marozzi, author of "Islamic Empires: Fifteen Cities that Define a Civilisation."

The reference to the Mongol conqueror is inevitable when pondering the fate of Aleppo, Syria's economic hub before the war and once home to one of the world's best-preserved old cities.

Tamerlane put the city to the sword six centuries ago, but the devastation wrought on Aleppo in the past decade was not the work of a foreign invader.

Maamoun Abdel Karim was Syria's antiquities chief when the worst of the destruction occurred, from 2012 to 2016.

"Over the past two millennia of Syrian history, nothing worse has happened than what did during the war," he told AFP in Damascus.

"Complete and utter destruction. We're not talking just about an earthquake in some place or a fire in another -- or even war in one city —but destruction across the whole of Syria," he said.

Looting -

Before the war, the northern city of Aleppo -- considered to be one of the world's longest continuously inhabited -- boasted markets, mosques, caravanserais, and public baths.

But the brutal siege imposed on rebels left it disfigured.

The government, which from 2015 benefitted from Russia's military might, relied heavily on air power to claw back the territory.

"I can't forget the day the minaret of the Umayyad mosque in Aleppo fell, or the day the fire ripped through the city's ancient markets," Abdel Karim said.

Other buildings which, like the 11th century minaret, had survived Tamerlane to stand for centuries were lost forever.

"Around 10 per cent of Syria's antiquities were damaged, and that's high for a country with so many relics and historical sites," the former antiquities chief said.

A report published last year by the Gerda Henkel Foundation and the Paris-based Syrian Society for the Protection of Antiquities said more than 40,000 artefacts had been looted from museums and archeological sites since the start of the war.

The trafficking of "conflict antiquities" has generated millions of dollars for Islamic State, smaller rebel groups, state forces as well as more loosely-organised smuggling networks and individuals.

Daesh had a special department regulating excavations of archaeological sites on its territory, suggesting the profit to be made was significant, although it was never accurately quantified.

The chaos that engulfed Syria at the peak of the war allowed the more moveable pieces -- such as coins, statuettes and mosaic fragments -- to be scattered worldwide through the antiquities black market.

While some efforts have been undertaken to stem the illicit trade, and even in some cases to start repatriating stolen artefacts to Syria and Iraq, the damage done is huge.

'Wound for all humanity' 

The economic stakes are also huge for Syria's future. The country's heritage wealth was the key attraction of a tourism industry that had remained stunted but has massive potential.

Syria has six sites on the UNESCO elite list of world heritage and all of them sustained some level of damage in the war.

Besides Palmyra and Aleppo, the ancient cities of Damascus and Bosra also suffered. The spectacular Krak des Chevaliers crusader castle was also caught in the fighting, as were a group of old villages near the Turkish border known as "the dead cities".

Other major heritage landmarks sustained severe destruction, such as the site of Apamea, an ancient Roman-era city on the Orontes river known for a colonnade that ran even longer than Palmyra's.

At the height of its glory, Palmyra was a symbol of a pluralistic civilisation, a commercial hub on the Silk Road that was a cultural crossroads.

Its architecture was a blend of influences from ancient Rome and Greece, Persia and central Asia.

What was destroyed during the war in Palmyra, and by extension in the whole of Syria, is evidence of a multicultural past, a certain ideal of civilisation.

"All of us should care about the destruction of Syria's heritage because, as well as being Syrian and Arab, these ancient sites and cities and monuments form part of our common cultural patrimony," Marozzi said.

"Places like Palmyra have a universal significance and value. They are part of our world civilisation, they are milestones in our history as humans and so anything that damages them is a wound for all humanity."

Iran says received 150,000 doses of India's Covid jab

By - Mar 11,2021 - Last updated at Mar 11,2021

TEHRAN — Iran has received a shipment of 150,000 doses of an Indian Covid-19 vaccine, Covaxin, local media reported on Thursday, as the Islamic republic combats the Middle East's deadliest outbreak of the illness.

"The coronavirus vaccine shipment from India arrived at [Tehran's] Imam Khomeini airport containing 150,000 doses," deputy customs chief Mehrdad Jamal Arvanaghi told ISNA news agency.

Iran, which is in its second month of a vaccination campaign, is to receive another 375,000 doses from India next week, the health ministry's public relations head Kianoush Jahanpour announced on Twitter.

The country of more than 80 million has lost more than 61,000 lives out of over 1.7 million cases of Covid-19 infection, according to health ministry figures.

Tehran, using multiple sources, started its national vaccination campaign on February 9, but the number of people inoculated to date has not been announced.

It has bought a total of two million doses of Russia's Sputnik V, according to Jahanpour, to be delivered in stages.

He said Tehran plans to launch the local manufacture of the Russian jab before the start of the new Iranian year on March 21.

"Thirty six million to 40 million doses of Sputnik V will be produced and distributed" in the upcoming year, he was quoted as saying on the government's website.

Iran also received 250,000 doses of China's Sinopharm vaccine on February 28, after Jahanpour announced they were donated by the Chinese government.

Health Minister Saeed Namaki has said Iran will likewise receive 4.2 million doses of the vaccine developed by Anglo-Swedish firm AstraZeneca and Oxford University, purchased via the international vaccine mechanism Covax.

At the same time, Iran is working on locally developed vaccine projects. According to Iranian media, three homegrown vaccine projects have reached the clinical trials phase since December.

 

At least 20 dead in Egypt clothing factory fire

By - Mar 11,2021 - Last updated at Mar 11,2021

Smoke rises from a clothing factory on the eastern outskirts of the Egyptian capital Cairo, on Thursday (AFP photo)

CAIRO — At least 20 people were killed and 24 others injured Thursday in a clothing factory fire on the eastern outskirts of the Egyptian capital, medical and security sources told AFP.

Twelve fire trucks were dispatched to extinguish the huge blaze as smoke billowed out over the industrial area called Al-Obour, with the cause not immediately clear.

The state prosecutor has tasked a team with investigating the fire in the four-storey factory, the sources added.

A survivor who suffered burns to about 25 per cent of his body said he was nearly overcome by smoke inhalation when he escaped the inferno.

"I had two young women with me and a young man who I pushed so they could avoid the blaze," Mahmoud Mohamed said, quoted by Al Youm Al Sabea newspaper.

"I led them outside, running as the fire burned my body," said the young man who had been working at the factory for a year.

Acrid clouds of smoke swirled in the streets, forcing passersby to wrap clothing around their face to protect them from the fumes.

Egypt's textile union paid tribute to the factory workers who were killed and injured during the blaze, in a statement issued later.

The Arab world's most populous country has had a string of fires in recent years, as shoddy buildings have been constructed without safety standards amid a security vacuum following its 2011 revolution.

Last month, a fire in an unlicenced shoe warehouse in the capital's twin city Giza engulfed a 13-storey building overlooking a major highway. Residents were evacuated but no casualties were reported.

In May 2020, another fire in a mattress factory in the same industrial area broke out with no loss of life reported at the time.

In the same year, a fire erupted next to a busy Cairo highway as a leak from an oil pipeline set ablaze by passing cars left 17 people hurt.

A year earlier, at least 10 people were killed when a chemical tank exploded at a phosphates factory in the Red Sea port of Ain Sokhna.

Suspended sentence for German who spied for Egypt

By - Mar 11,2021 - Last updated at Mar 11,2021

BERLIN — A German who spied for Egypt while he was working in Chancellor Angela Merkel’s press office was handed a suspended prison sentence of one year and nine months, a Berlin court said Wednesday.

Egypt-born Amin K., 66, admitted to having exploited his privileged position in the office to pass on information to Egypt’s General Intelligence Service (GIS) between 2010 and 2019.

“The defendant pleaded guilty,” said a spokeswoman for the regional court of appeals in Berlin.

The sentence, which was handed down last week, was the result of an agreement reached between K.’s defence lawyers and the state prosecutors.

The 66-year-old had worked since 1999 for the visitor service of the federal press office, which among other things is responsible for communicating Merkel’s activities.

According to the charge sheet, he supported the intelligence services “on behalf of the Egyptian embassy” and had “largely conspiratorial” contact with his handlers.

He made observations about media coverage of Egypt-related domestic and foreign policy issues in Germany, as well as events such as a demonstration in Berlin in 2018 and a raid on a mosque whose imam had links to Egypt.

In 2014 and 2015, he also helped in a failed attempt to recruit a translator for the German parliament’s language service as another source and handed over the names of five Syrian-born colleagues at the press office.

Investigators did not find evidence that K. was paid directly for his espionage. He allegedly hoped to win preferential treatment from the Egyptian authorities and succeeded in securing help with his mother’s claim to her pension payments.

Appearing as a witness at the trial, K.’s former manager at the press office said the 66-year-old was only responsible for sending visitor’s programmes and would not have had access to any sensitive information.

“We simply could not have imagined that he was spying for Egypt,” he told the court.

The case came to light with the publication of a German intelligence service report in 2019.

According to the report, both the GIS and Egypt’s domestic intelligence service NSS are active in Germany.

Their main objective in the country is allegedly to gather information on dissident groups opposed to Abdel Fattah Al Sisi’s government, such as the Muslim Brotherhood.

Libya lawmakers approve interim gov't in key step towards elections

By - Mar 11,2021 - Last updated at Mar 11,2021

Libyan security forces keep watch outside Ouagadougou Conference Centre in the north-central city of Sirte on Wednesday during a parliament session (AFP photo)

SIRTE, Libya — Libya's parliament on Wednesday approved a unity government to lead the war-ravaged North African nation to December elections, a key step towards ending a decade of chaos.

Oil-rich Libya descended into conflict after leader Muammar Qadhafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011, resulting in multiple forces vying for power.

"This will be the government of all Libyans," interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah said, in a brief but emotional speech after the vote.

"Libya is one and united," he added.

After two days of intense debate in the central city of Sirte, parliament approved Dbeibah's Cabinet, with 121 of the 132 lawmakers present voting in support, the parliament spokesman said on live television.

"Thank you for your trust," Dbeibah told lawmakers. "Thank you for putting the nation's interest above all else."

The United Nations mission praised leaders for the "patriotic efforts that led to this landmark moment in the history of Libya".

But the challenges ahead are daunting.

The interim government must now tackle the many grievances of Libyans, from a dire economic crisis and soaring unemployment to crippling inflation and wretched public services.

"Libya has now a genuine opportunity to move forward towards unity, stability, prosperity, reconciliation and to restore fully its sovereignty," the UN said.

Libya has been split between the UN-recognised Government of National Accord, based in the capital Tripoli and backed by Turkey, and an administration in the east supported by military strongman Khalifa Haftar, with the backing of the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Russia.

But a UN-supervised process aims to unite the country after a ceasefire last October, and the new government has to bring the rival administrations together.

Fayez Al Sarraj, outgoing head of the GNA, said he was "fully ready to hand over" power, while influential parliament speaker Aguila Saleh called it "a historic day".

The government's endorsement was welcomed by the United States and the European Union, who also both called the vote "historic", as well as Britain, neighbouring Egypt and France.

The US Ambassador Richard Norland said it "set the stage for elections" and offered his congratulations.

"The new unity government can count on the full support of the international community," EU Ambassador to Libya Jose Sabadell said.

"Reconciliation, improving basic services and preparing elections will be central challenges."

Lawmakers met in Sirte, a Mediterranean port city which lies halfway between Tripoli, where the western government is based, and the east, where parliament has sat in recent years.

Libyan media said the government would be sworn in on Monday in Benghazi in the east, Libya's second city and cradle of the 2011 revolution.

 

Foreign forces remain 

 

Dbeibah, 61, a billionaire businessman from the western city of Misrata, was selected in February alongside an interim three-member presidency council to head the new unity administration.

The process has been marred by allegations of vote-buying, but Dbeibah defended the composition of his government.

"My first objective was to choose people with whom I would be able to work, no matter where they come from," Dbeibah said, during the debate in parliament.

Dbeibah's government includes two deputy prime ministers, 26 ministers and six ministers of state, with the key foreign affairs and justice portfolios handed to women, a first in Libya.

Another key task facing the new administration is ensuring the departure of an estimated 20,000 mercenaries and foreign fighters. Dbeibah told lawmakers they were "a stab in our back".

The premier said Tuesday he would contact the UN and the countries where the mercenaries come from to demand they withdraw.

A January 23 deadline for their withdrawal passed without any sign of them pulling them out.

Some have literally dug in. In January, satellite images broadcast by CNN showed a trench running tens of kilometres dug by "Russian mercenaries" near the frontline city of Sirte.

An advance team of a UN observer mission arrived in Libya last week tasked with monitoring the ceasefire and verifying the departure of the thousands of foreign fighters.

Pages

Pages



Newsletter

Get top stories and blog posts emailed to you each day.

PDF