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Libya breakthrough to be sought at Paris conference
The major international conference dedicated to the oil-rich north African country has been organised to bring together the rival factions for power, as well as neighbouring countries and regional backers.
"After seven years of conflict and tensions, this unprecedented conference ... aims to open a new period of stability and cooperation which is awaited by the Libyan people," a statement from the French presidency said on Sunday.
An aide to French president Emmanuel Macron said the Libyan leaders had agreed in principle to a roadmap that would pave the way for parliamentary and presidential elections, if possible before the end of the year.
The invitees include Prime Minister Fayez al-Sarraj, head of Libya's UN-backed unity government in Tripoli in the west, and 75-year-old military strongman Khalifa Haftar, whose rival Libyan National Army dominates the country's east.
Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker based in the eastern town of Tobruk who opposes the UN-backed administration, is also expected, as is Khalid al-Mishri, the newly elected head of the High Council of State.
Years of mediation by the United Nations, as well as former colonial power Italy, have failed to bring stability to Libya which descended into chaos after the ousting of dictator Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
Since then, the country has become a new base for the Islamic State militant group and other jihadists, as well as a departure point for hundreds of thousands of African migrants seeking to enter Europe.
Regional powers
European leaders see stabilising the country as key to tackling the joint security and immigration threats, and Macron threw himself into finding a solution shortly after his election in May last year.
The 40-year-old French leader brought Sarraj and Haftar together in Paris where they agreed a ceasefire and to hold elections in 2018 - a move that irked the Italian government at the time which was blindsided by Macron's diplomacy.
It remains to be seen if the conference on Tuesday will lead to real change on the ground, after several false dawns since the fall of Qaddafi and peace deals that have failed to be honoured.
The UN special envoy for Libya, Ghassan Salame, has given up trying to implement a 2015 political agreement to set up a unity government, instead focusing on trying to hold elections as a way to unify the country.
Representatives from 19 countries involved in Libya have been invited - an acknowledgement that the country's problems can only be resolved if regional powers agree on the roadmap.
These include Egypt, Russia and the United Arab Emirates which have backed Haftar and the rival administration in Tobruk in the east, not the UN-recognised government based in the capital Tripoli.
Qatar, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, as well as neighbours Algeria and Tunisia will also send representatives to the talks.