قناع الوجه المقشر والمنعم بالأعشاب
وفر 18%! اشترِ قناع الوجه المقشر والمنعم بالأعشاب بسعر 176.26 د.ل فقط في ليبيا.
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Libya Press
Libya's Presidential Council head Mohammed al-Menfi held a high-level meeting on Wednesday, June 24, 2026, with the acting ambassadors of Egypt, Algeria, and Tunisia at the council's headquarters in Tripoli. The talks focused on accelerating Libya's political transition, supporting national stability, and advancing the long-delayed presidential and parliamentary elections. The meeting comes just hours after a separate extraordinary tripartite foreign ministers' summit between the three North African nations issued a unified call for a "Libyan-led solution" and the immediate departure of all foreign forces from Libyan territory.
The convergence of these two diplomatic events — the envoy meeting in Tripoli and the foreign ministers' declaration — signals a renewed regional push to break Libya's years-long political deadlock. According to statements carried by Egyptian and Libyan media, al-Menfi discussed with the three envoys concrete steps to consolidate the ceasefire, unify state institutions, and create conditions conducive to free and fair elections. The acting Egyptian charge d'affaires Tamer al-Hafni, along with the acting Tunisian and Algerian ambassadors, reaffirmed their countries' commitment to Libya's sovereignty and territorial integrity.
While full transcripts of the closed-door Tripoli meeting have not been published, the Egyptian acting charge d'affaires Tamer al-Hafni conveyed Cairo's position that "the stability of Libya is inseparable from the stability of the entire region, and that Egypt stands ready to support every Libyan-led initiative toward elections and national reconciliation." The Algerian and Tunisian envoys echoed similar sentiments, emphasizing that their governments reject any external interference in Libya's internal affairs and support the unification of the Libyan military under a single civilian authority.
For ordinary Libyans, the diplomatic flurry is more than protocol — it is a potential turning point. Libya has endured over a decade of division since the 2011 uprising, with rival governments in Tripoli and the east, a fractured central bank, and deteriorating public services. The presence of foreign fighters and mercenaries continues to threaten civilian safety and undermines any genuine political process. The fact that Libya's three most critical neighbors — Egypt, Algeria, and Tunisia — are now coordinating their positions and engaging directly with the Presidential Council in Tripoli raises cautious optimism that regional pressure could finally translate into tangible progress on elections and institutional unity.
LibyaPress has consistently reported that the absence of elections remains the single greatest obstacle to stability. Every month without a vote deepens the legitimacy crisis, empowers armed factions, and delays the economic reforms that Libyans desperately need. The involvement of neighboring states, while sometimes viewed with suspicion, is essential given their direct security and economic stakes in Libya's future.
The coming weeks will be critical. The Presidential Council is expected to follow up on the envoy meeting with formal proposals to the High National Elections Commission regarding a constitutional framework for voting. Meanwhile, the tripartite foreign ministers' call for foreign force withdrawal adds diplomatic weight to the UN Special Mission in Libya's (UNSMIL) ongoing mediation efforts. Libyans across the country will be watching closely to see whether this renewed regional engagement produces concrete timelines — or fades into yet another round of unfulfilled promises. For now, the message from Tripoli and its neighbors is clear: the window for a Libyan-led solution is open, but it will not stay open forever.
— LibyaPress / Politics Desk