Libya
Minister
Wants
“Non-Military”
Force to
Protect Oil,
Talks Nice(r)
on Khatallah
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
July 17 --
When Libya's
foreign
minister
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz
emerged from
the UN
Security
Council on
July 17 to take
questions
from the media,
Inner City
Press asked
him to be more
specific about
what type of
“support”
force he is
asking for.
Mohamed
Abdel
Aziz replied
that the
request is not
for a
“military”
force
-- but then
went on to say
say the force
should protect
oil fields
and ports. If
that's not
military, what
is it?
Inner
City Press
also asked
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz for
Libya's
current
position
on the US
arresting Abu
Khatallah.
Compared to
the complaints
of
others,
Mohamed Abdel
Aziz said that
even though
under
international
law it is
unacceptable,
since Libya
can't protect
witnesses,
maybe it
is okay.
Given
the current
state of
affairs, what
is “Libya's”
position?
Meanwhile
on
July 17 the
UN's envoy to
Libya Tarek
Mitri told the
Security
Council -- by
video from his
native
Lebanon, while
other UN
international
staff are in
Tunisia --
that the
fighting has
“cast a
shadow over
the election
on 25 June of
the 200 member
Council of
Representatives.”
Ya don't say.
Mitri
said
that barely
forty percent
of the 1.5
million
registered
Libyans
went to the
polls. He said
12 seats will
remain vacant;
41 candidates
were
disqualified
under the
post-Gaddafi
Law on
Political and
Administrative
Isolation.
Final results
are supposed
to be
announced
on July 20.
Watch this
site.