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Diplomatic sources to Al-Araby Al-Jadeed: Algeria does not object to the new government in Libya.

Libyan interim prime minister Fathi Bashagha, newly named by the Libyan parliament, delivers a speech at Mitiga International Airport in Tripoli on February 10, 2022. - Libya faced the challenge of two prime ministers Thursday after parliament named a rival to the existing unity government's chief Abdulhamid Dbeibah, hours after his convoy was targeted in a drive-by shooting. The appointment of a second prime minister threatens to spark a new power struggle in the war-torn nation. (Photo by Mahmud Turkia / AFP) (Photo by MAHMUD TURKIA/AFP via Getty Images)

Algerian diplomatic sources said that Algeria does not object to the new political track in Libya; For two reasons, the first is that it is a conclusion of Libyan understandings, and the second is that it has no objection to the person of Bashagha, who has good relations with Algeria.

The sources confirmed, in a statement to Al-Araby Al-Jadeed newspaper, that Algeria focuses in its approaches with Libya on supporting the Libyan-Libyan solution without external interference, explaining that Bashagha made several visits to it when he was Minister of the Interior, and that it helped him form teams of the police and the Libyan criminal police in its own schools.

The same sources revealed Algeria’s fear that the new path would contradict the international path to the solution in Libya, which provides for holding elections and handing over the Dbaiba government to an elected government, especially after the latter announced his refusal to hand over power to the new prime minister in light of UN recognition of his government.

It is worth noting that, last Thursday, the House of Representatives chose Fathi Bashagha as the head of the new government.

Written by Journalist

The HoR voted unanimously to choose Bashagha as Prime Minister and to amend the Constitutional Declaration.

“Statement” of the people of Misurata: We will not participate in any political alignment that divides the city’s ranks.