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          Libya calls on UN to form int'l committee to audit Libyan finances

          Source: Xinhua   2018-07-11 06:16:45

          TRIPOLI, July 10 (Xinhua) -- Libya's UN-backed Prime Minister Fayez Serraj on Tuesday called on the UN Security Council to form an international committee to audit the financial transactions of the country's two divided central banks.

          "We call on your esteemed council to urgently form an international technical committee, supervised by the United Nations and assisted by international financial and economic organizations, to audit all the revenues, expenditures, and transactions of the Central Bank in Tripoli and the Central Bank in al-Bayda (eastern Libya)," Serraj said in a letter addressed to the UN Security Council.

          Despite signing a UN-sponsored peace agreement by the Libyan parties later in 2015, the country remains politically divided between two governments in the east and the west, including two divided central banks.

          "We stress that this request serves the public interest. It also clarifies the truth about the whole financial situation to everyone, in order to reveal all previous expenditures by any institution without exception," Serraj said.

          The Libyan eastern-based army, led by Khalifa Haftar, recently took control of the oil crescent region, which is located some 500 km east of the capital Tripoli and contains the country's largest oil ports, after defeating the militants occupying it.

          Shortly after that, the army handed over the region to the National Oil Corporation of the eastern-based interim government, instead of the Tripoli-based UN-backed unity government.

          The UN-backed government warned against "negative repercussions" of suspension of oil exports in the oil crescent region, saying halting oil exports could cost more than 67 million U.S. dollars a day.

          Libya suffered losses over the past years of more than 140 billion dollars due to repeated closures of oil fields and ports, as well as low prices of oil in the global market.

          Editor: Mu Xuequan
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          Libya calls on UN to form int'l committee to audit Libyan finances

          Source: Xinhua 2018-07-11 06:16:45

          TRIPOLI, July 10 (Xinhua) -- Libya's UN-backed Prime Minister Fayez Serraj on Tuesday called on the UN Security Council to form an international committee to audit the financial transactions of the country's two divided central banks.

          "We call on your esteemed council to urgently form an international technical committee, supervised by the United Nations and assisted by international financial and economic organizations, to audit all the revenues, expenditures, and transactions of the Central Bank in Tripoli and the Central Bank in al-Bayda (eastern Libya)," Serraj said in a letter addressed to the UN Security Council.

          Despite signing a UN-sponsored peace agreement by the Libyan parties later in 2015, the country remains politically divided between two governments in the east and the west, including two divided central banks.

          "We stress that this request serves the public interest. It also clarifies the truth about the whole financial situation to everyone, in order to reveal all previous expenditures by any institution without exception," Serraj said.

          The Libyan eastern-based army, led by Khalifa Haftar, recently took control of the oil crescent region, which is located some 500 km east of the capital Tripoli and contains the country's largest oil ports, after defeating the militants occupying it.

          Shortly after that, the army handed over the region to the National Oil Corporation of the eastern-based interim government, instead of the Tripoli-based UN-backed unity government.

          The UN-backed government warned against "negative repercussions" of suspension of oil exports in the oil crescent region, saying halting oil exports could cost more than 67 million U.S. dollars a day.

          Libya suffered losses over the past years of more than 140 billion dollars due to repeated closures of oil fields and ports, as well as low prices of oil in the global market.

          [Editor: huaxia]
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