Libya Prime Minister says Egypt will help train army

09 Oct, 2014

Libya's embattled prime minister, Abdullah al-Thani, said on Wednesday Egypt would help to train his army and called on compatriots to fight Islamist led-militias that have overrun the capital. Thani and the majority of an internationally recognised parliament elected in June are in virtual domestic exile in the eastern city of Tobruk because of widespread security problems, including in Tripoli where a rival administration has been set up.
Egypt shares a long and porous desert border with Libya, and has backed Thani against the militias that seized Tripoli and are fighting for control of the airport in the country's second city Benghazi. "We are facing terrorism," Thani told a news conference with his Egyptian counterpart, Ibrahim Mahlab. "I call on all honourable citizens who refuse to be ruled by force to prepare to defend themselves. To die standing is better than to live humiliated," he said.
Thani, in Cairo for meetings with Egyptian officials, said they are aimed at "co-ordinating co-operation (with Egypt) on implementing a practical plan". That would include Egypt "training and improving the efficiency of the (Libyan) army," he said. Libya has been sliding into chaos since longtime leader Muammar Qadhafi was toppled in an uprising three years ago, with interim authorities confronted by powerful militias that fought to oust him. Thani's visit comes days after dozens of soldiers died in car bombings at Benghazi airport and in clashes with Islamists. The troops were loyal to a former general who launched a campaign in May against an Islamist militia in Benghazi. Egypt and Algeria, which both border Libya, are concerned that the violence will spill over into their territories.

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