Libya's foreign minister suspended after meeting with Israeli counterpart

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Libya's Foreign Minister Suspended After Meeting With Israeli Counterpart
Najla Mangoush’s meeting with Eli Cohen has prompted proests in the streets of Libya. Photo: PA Images
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Samy Magdy, Associated Press

One of Libya’s rival prime ministers has suspended his foreign minister a day after it was revealed she met with her Israeli counterpart last week.

The news prompted scattered street protests in the chaos-stricken North African nation.

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Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, who heads the government of national unity in the capital, Tripoli, also referred Najla Mangoush for investigation over the meeting, which was the first ever between foreign ministers of Libya and Israel.

Israeli foreign minister Eli Cohen and Ms Mangoush met in Rome last week. It was a small breakthrough for Israel’s government, whose hardline policies towards the Palestinians have led to a cooling of its burgeoning ties with the Arab world.

People protesting in Libya
People protesting in Libya after Najla Mangoush and Eli Cohen met in Rome last week (AP Photo/Yousef Murad)

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Mr Cohen said they discussed the importance of preserving the heritage of Libya’s former Jewish community, including renovating synagogues and cemeteries. The talks also touched on possible Israeli assistance for humanitarian issues, agriculture and water management, according to Israel’s foreign ministry.

The Libyan foreign ministry, meanwhile, sought to downplay the importance of the meeting as “unprepared and an unofficial meeting during a meeting with Italy’s foreign minister. It said in a statement that Ms Mangoush’s encounter with Mr Cohen did not include “any talks, agreements or consultations”.

Israel’s foreign ministry did not respond to reporters’ questions early on Monday, including whether Mr Cohen’s announcement had been co-ordinated with Libya.

Libya was plunged into chaos after a Nato-backed uprising toppled long-time dictator Muammar Gaddafi in 2011. The oil-rich country has been split between the Western-backed government in Tripoli and a rival administration in the country’s east. Each side has been backed by armed groups and foreign governments. Gaddafi was hostile to Israel and a staunch supporter of the Palestinians, including radical militant groups opposed to peace with Israel.

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Sunday’s announcement of the meeting prompted scattered protests in Tripoli and other towns in western Libya. Protesters stormed the foreign ministry headquarters to condemn the meeting, while others attacked and burned a residence for the prime minister in Tripoli, according to local reports.

People burn a shirt showing Libyan foreign minister Najla Mangoush in Tripoli
People burn a shirt showing Libyan foreign minister Najla Mangoush in Tripoli (AP Photo/Yousef Murad)

In the town of Zawiya protesters burned the Israeli flag, while others held the Palestinian flag. There were also protests in the city of Misrata, a stronghold for Mr Dbeibah, according to footage circulated on social media and verified by The Associated Press.

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Khalid al-Mishri, an Islamist politician who was the chairman of the State Council, a Tripoli-based legislative body, condemned the meeting and called for the dismissal of Mr Dbeibah’s government, which is close to the US and the West.

“This government has crossed all prohibited lines and must be brought down,” he wrote on the X platform, previously known as Twitter.

The east-based House of Representatives also slammed the meeting as a “legal and moral crime”. It called for an emergency session on Monday in the eastern city of Benghazi.

In Israel, Yair Lapid, a former foreign minister and prime minister, criticised Mr Cohen for going public with the sensitive meeting.

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“Countries of the world this morning are looking at the irresponsible leak of the meeting of the Israeli and Libyan foreign minister and asking themselves: is it possible to manage foreign relations with this country? Is it possible to trust this country?” Mr Lapid said in a statement.

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