06:55 02/07/2015
Tripoli - Libya's rival governments will not return to peace
talks this week after rebel forces on Wednesday rejected the latest
proposal, defying threats the UN Security Council would impose sanctions
on anyone who stands in the way of a deal.
The National General
Congress parliament in Tripoli, which was seized by rebel forces last
year, said it would consult for a week on the new draft, ruling out
returning to the talks due to begin in Morocco on Thursday.
"The
amendments introduced in the latest text submitted by the UN did not
include [our own] proposals," it said in a statement released late on
Wednesday.
Libya Dawn, the coalition of militias that controls the
capital, also rejected the latest peace plan as "treason, because it
sanctions the creation of a fascist dictatorship under the auspices of
the UN".
Dozens
of people protested against the new draft in front of the CGN's
headquarters in Tripoli on Wednesday, burning pictures of the UN envoy
leading the peace talks Bernardino Leon, according to an AFP journalist
on the scene.
Libya's leadership is split between Libya Dawn
forces, who seized the capital last year, and the internationally
recognised government that was forced to flee to Tobruk, in the
northeast of the country.
The factions are facing international
pressure to form a national unity government and end years of chaos in
the war-torn country, which has become a hotbed of jihadist groups and a
starting point for migrant smugglers sending people across the
Mediterranean to Europe.
UN sanctions
The
UN Security Council on Wednesday warned that "there can be no military
solution to the crisis in Libya" and urged all sides to "sign the
proposal presented by the UN support mission in Libya in the coming
days".
A national unity government "is in the interests of the
Libyan people and their future, in order to end Libya's political,
security and institutional crises and to confront the rising threat of
terrorism," it added.
The
15-member council said it was "prepared to sanction those who threaten
Libya's peace, stability and security or that undermine the successful
completion of its political transition".
In Tobruk, the seat of
Libya's internationally recognised government, lawmaker Osama Mohamed
Faraj al-Chaaf said parliament was ready "in principle to endorse" the
text, according to a news agency close to the authorities.
Previous bid blocked
A
previous bid by Britain, France, Spain and the United States to step up
pressure on the sides with sanctions was blocked by Russia and China.
The
United Nations has been brokering talks between Libya's various groups
with a view to establishing a government that could confront the threat
from Islamic State extremists, who have gained a foothold in several
towns.
A surge of jihadist violence across the region, including
the killing of 38 people, most of them British tourists, at a Tunisian
beach resort on Friday, has prompted mounting international pressure for
a deal.
Libyan factions agreed during Geneva talks in January to
set up a national unity government to restore stability that has been
shattered since the 2011 fall of Muammar Gaddafi.
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