Hillary Clinton Will Meet the Libyan Opposition

Published in Infobae
(Argentina) on 10 March 2011
by (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Eugenia Lucchelli. Edited by Jenette Axelrod.
The United State’s secretary of state will meet the Libyan opposition during a tour of Egypt and Tunisia next week. This decision is a wink to the rebel government of Benghazi, which has already been recognized by France.

"We are reaching out to the opposition inside and outside of Libya. Next week I will travel to Cairo and Tunis to speak directly to the Tunisian and the Egyptian people," added Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.

Clinton's statement is framed in a series of diplomatic decisions that move to align the West with the Libyan rebels that are fighting against Moammar Gadhafi’s army, and who now have the support of European nations.

France was the first country to recognize the authority of the newly created National Council after a meeting with delegates from the organization in Paris. French representatives assured the Council they will send an ambassador to their headquarters in Benghazi, the city that acts as the provisional capital of rebel Libya.

Portugal, too, gave signs of a willingness to open dialogue with the Council, after communicating to one of Gadhafi's emissaries that his regime "is over," according to the leader of Portuguese diplomacy, Luis Amado.

Hillary Clinton did not specify who her interlocutors will be during her tour of northern Africa next week.


La secretaria de Estado estadounidense lo hará durante una gira por Egipto y Túnez la semana próxima. La decisión es un guiño hacia el Gobierno rebelde de Bengasi, que ya fue reconocido por Francia.

"Vamos a reunirnos con la oposición dentro y fuera de Libia. Me reuniré con alguno de ellos, tanto en Estados Unidos como durante mi gira (por Egipto y Túnez) la semana próxima, para debatir qué más pueden hacer Estados Unidos y otros países", añadió la Secretaria de Estado norteamericano.

La declaración de Clinton se enmarca en una serie de decisiones diplomáticas que tienden a que Occidente se alinee definitivamente del lado de los rebeldes libios, que combaten contra el ejército de Muammar Khadafi y han sumado adhesiones de alto rango a nivel europeo.

Francia fue el primer país en reconocer la autoridad del recién creado Consejo Nacional, con sede en Bengasi, tras una reunión con enviados del organismo a París. Incluso se aseguró que enviará un embajador a la ciudad que provisoriamente oficial de "capital" rebelde de Libia.

También Portugal dio señales de acercamiento al Consejo, tras comunicarle a un emisario de Khadafi que su régimen "está acabado", según afirmó el jefe de la diplomacia lusitana, Luis Amado.

Hillary Clinton no especificó quienes serán sus interlocutores en su tour por el convulsionado norte de África, programado para los días 15, 16 y 17 de marzo, es decir, la semana que viene.
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