Libya to UN Security Council: Lift Arms Embargo to Fight IS

UNITED NATIONS: Libya's foreign minister has demanded that the UN Security Council lift an arms embargo so his country can fight the Islamic State group as it establishes a presence in north Africa and moves closer to Europe.

Foreign Minister Mohammed al Dairi spoke to an emergency session of the council yesterday amid regional alarm after the Islamic State group over the weekend posted a video of the beheadings of 21 Egyptian Coptic Christians in Libya.

Al Dairi stressed that Libya is not asking for  international intervention. But he said the international community has a "legal and moral responsibility to lend urgent support" and that the region, including the Mediterranean, is in danger.

"If we fail to have arms provided to us, this can only play into the hands of extremists," he said.

He told reporters he wanted to see the same attention paid the danger in Libya as has been paid to Iraq and Syria, where a US-led coalition is battling the Islamic State group.

The foreign minister of neighbouring Egypt, Sameh Shoukry, called for a naval blockade on arms heading to areas of Libya outside the control of "legitimate authorities."

He did not rule out troops on the ground in Libya and said his country was seeking international support "by all means."

Jordan was circulating a draft resolution on the issue to fellow council members later yesterday.

Aside from the call to lift the arms embargo, the draft resolution also calls on militias to withdraw from Tripoli to allow the return of the "legitimate government," and it condemns any attempt to supply arms to non-state actors.

Egypt responded strongly to the beheadings, carrying out airstrikes against Islamic State group positions in Libya and saying it was in self-defense. Shoukry has said those airstrikes could continue.

Energy rich Libya is wracked by the worst fighting since long-ruling dictator Moammar Gadhafi was overthrown in 2011. Two rival governments and parliaments, each backed by different militias, rule in the country's eastern and western regions.

After Islamic and tribal militias took over the capital, Tripoli, the elected parliament has been forced to function in the eastern city of Tobruk.

On Tuesday, Egyptian President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi had called on the United Nations to approve a new coalition for airstrikes in Libya, where the extremists have set up their first major affiliate outside of Iraq and Syria.

But UN diplomats said Egypt's initial demands eased during talks later Tuesday.

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