Sisi pledges Egypt’s support for interim government in Libya

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi met with newly elected Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibeh in Cairo on Thursday.

Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi pledged his support for Libya’s newly elected government during a meeting in Cairo Thursday with the interim prime minister, Abdulhamid Dbeibeh.

During UN-facilitated talks in Geneva, Switzerland, earlier this month, a group of Libyan delegates elected Dbeibeh as their next prime minister and named a three-member presidential council. Dbeibeh, a prominent Misrata-based businessman, will steer the war-battered country until general elections are held in December.

Egypt, along with the United Arab Emirates and Russia, has backed renegade commander Khalifa Hifter in Libya’s civil war. Sisi views the fighting between Hifter’s forces and the internationally recognized Government of National Accord as a security threat to Egypt, which shares a 746-mile border with Libya.

In a statement, Sisi voiced “Egypt’s full readiness to provide all its expertise and experience … in a way that contributes to putting Libya on the right track and preparing the country to move toward horizons of construction, development and stability.”

Egyptian Prime Minister Mustafa Madbouly and Director of Egypt’s General Intelligence Service Abbas Kamel also attended the meeting, which marked Dbeibeh’s first foreign visit since his election.

The election of an interim government is the latest attempt at unifying the North African country after six years of civil war and an uprising that overthrew and killed longtime dictator Moammar Gadhafi. Dbeibeh and the presidential council chosen in Geneva have pledged to hold nationwide elections on Dec. 24 and appoint women to 30% of all senior government positions.

As the UN seeks to unify Libya’s rival administrations, an Egyptian delegation visited Tripoli earlier this week. The Egyptians and their Libyan counterparts reportedly discussed plans to reopen Egypt’s embassy in Tripoli, which it shuttered in 2014.