France, Germany, Italy urge end to Libya fighting by Staff Writers Brussels (AFP) Dec 13, 2019 The leaders of France, Germany and Italy urged all sides in the Libyan conflict to cease fighting Friday, after strongman Khalifa Haftar threatened to assault Tripoli. After an EU summit in Brussels, Emmanuel Macron, Angela Merkel and Giuseppe Conte said stability in Libya "can only be achieved through a political solution". The trio did not mention Haftar by name, but their statement was issued after he announced a "decisive battle and the advance on the heart of Tripoli". The capital is held by Libya's UN-recognised Government of National Accord, but Haftar, supported by the United Arab Emirates, says the GNA backs "terrorists". European powers are worried further violence could disrupt fragile efforts to negotiate peace, including an upcoming international conference in Berlin. The three urged "all Libyan and international parties to cease military action, make a sincere commitment to a comprehensive and lasting cessation of hostilities and resume a credible UN-led negotiation process. "They reaffirmed their full support for the United Nations and the work of the Special Representative of the Secretary General, Ghassan Salame, as lasting peace and stability in Libya can only be achieved through a political solution," the statement said. Merkel told reporters it was "clear at this point that Libya is quite a proxy war". "None of the parties there can act alone under their own steam, and that's why we feel called upon to move forward politically as quickly as possible," she said. At least 200 civilians and more than 2,000 fighters have been killed since April, the start of Haftar's push on Tripoli, according to the United Nations. The fighting has also displaced 146,000 people.
Fracking leaves heavy footprint in Argentina's Patagonia Anelo, Argentina (AFP) Dec 12, 2019 Pumpjack oil wells peck like giant birds at the ground, plumes of yellow flames flare from gas pipelines, lakes accumulate contaminated waste - Patagonia and its indigenous people are paying a heavy price for Argentina's economic progress. Vaca Muerta, a huge sweep of western Patagonian wilderness, sits on the world's second largest reserve of shale gas and its fourth largest oil reserves. A push to develop extraction amid Argentina's crippling economic crisis has made the area a magnet for int ... read more
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