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Coastal road reopened in Libya, 9 months after ceasefire 

July 30, 2021 at 11:18 am

Libyan Interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah, waves as he stands atop an excavator on June 20, 2021, in the town of Buwairat al-Hassoun, during a ceremony to mark the reopening of 300-kilometre road between the cities of Misrata and Sirte. [MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP via Getty Images]

Libya’s warring sides today said they had reopened the main coastal road across the frontline, a key element of a ceasefire they agreed last year that has involved months of negotiations, Reuters reported.

The UN-backed 5+5 committee drawn from renegade General Khalifa Haftar’s eastern-based Libyan National Army (LNA) and western-based forces that have supported Tripoli-based governments said in a statement the road was open from 0900 GMT.

It was not open to military traffic, the committee said, and the agreement also included some preparatory steps for the withdrawal of foreign fighters, another part of last year’s ceasefire that has still to be implemented.

The slow progress in opening the road has reflected other stumbles in the UN-backed effort to resolve Libya’s long conflict with a ceasefire, a unity government, proposed elections and moves to unify economic institutions.

READ: There will be no more wars in Libya, PM says

The Government of National Unity (GNU), picked through a UN-aided process early this year and then ratified by the divided, eastern-based parliament, took office in March.

However, since that point there has been little agreement on key steps forwards including on a constitutional basis for the elections scheduled in December and for the GNU’s budget.

Critics of parliament speaker Aguila Saleh, allied with Haftar during his 2019-20 assault on Tripoli, regard the delays as evidence that eastern-based forces are attempting to sabotage the process.

Saleh and his allies in eastern Libya meanwhile accused the GNU of becoming “a Tripoli government” and blamed it for the failure to unify institutions.

Last week Saleh warned that a failure to hold elections meant another rival administration could be set up in the east.