الاثنين، 16 ديسمبر 2013

Libya _ militia leader refuses to reopen oil ports, challenges Tripoli govt&

gulf-times
The leader of a movement pushing for greater autonomy in eastern Libya said yesterday he would not end the blockade of several oil-exporting ports, dashing hopes of a resolution to a three-month standoff with the Tripoli government.
The announcement was a blow to Prime Minister Ali Zeidan who had said he expected the blockage to end yesterday after almost two weeks of negotiations with eastern tribal leaders to free up the vital trade.
Western powers worry Libya will slide into chaos as the Tripoli government struggles to rein in militias and tribesmen who helped topple Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but kept their weapons and control parts of the Opec producer.
Last Tuesday, the eastern autonomy group said it would release three ports - which had previously handled 600,000 barrels of oil exports a day - if Tripoli let it take a share of oil sales and investigated reports of corruption in the industry.
“We have failed to reach a deal on these conditions with this (Tripoli) government,” autonomy leader Ibrahim Jathran told reporters at his group’s home base in Ajdabiya, west of Benghazi.
“I therefore confirm that we will not reopen the ports for this corrupt government,” he said in brief statement.
He accused Zeidan’s government of letting down Libyans after the revolt that ended four decades of Gaddafi rule.
“We want a decent life, rights, security, an army, police and security forces which protect citizens,” said Jathran, who was a rebel commander during the NATO-backed uprising.
Jathran used to head a force protecting oil installations until he defected with his heavily-armed men in the summer and seized the Ras Lanuf, Es-Sider and Zueitina ports to boost his campaign for more regional autonomy and a greater share of oil sales.
The port blockages, along with strikes by oil workers, civil servants and other protesters at oilfields across the vast desert country, have cut oil exports to 110,000 bpd from more than 1mn in July.
Libya needs dollars to fund imports of wheat and other basic foodstuffs, and the government has warned it will not be able to pay public sector workers if oil strikes continue.
There was no immediate comment from Tripoli. Officials have previously refused to recognise the self-declared eastern government and warned that the central government would attack any tanker trying to load oil at seized ports.
Zeidan and other officials had expressed confidence that Jathran would be persuaded to lift the port blockages, which raised hopes on international markets that three months of oil strikes would end.
Jathran is popular among many in the east demanding a political system to share power and the oil wealth equally between the eastern Cyrenaica, the west and the southern Fezzan, as was the case in the pre-Gaddafi era.
But tribal leaders have put pressure on Jathran to end his port action as many ordinary Libyans are tired of power cuts and fuel shortages blamed by the government on the blockages.
Richard Mallinson, geopolitical analyst at Energy Aspects consultancy in London, said Jathran’s move risked splitting the tribesmen and militias in the east.
“Struggles within power bases in the east could become significant,” he said.
Jathran did not repeat an earlier threat to start selling crude, bypassing Tripoli. When asked later by Reuters whether he would go ahead exporting oil from seized ports he only said this was up to his self-declared government.
“We gave them (the government) all powers to do its job,” he said, without elaborating.
Zeidan has been trying to get the ports reopened but has been weakened by political infighting with parliament and Islamist opponents.
The government also has to deal with a mix of different protesters. A separate set of tribal leaders has blocked Hariga port in the far east. Members of the Amazigh and Tibu, two minority groups, have also blocked gas or oil supplies in the past.

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