France expels 14 Libyan diplomats
FRANCE yesterday ordered 14 diplomats loyal to Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi to leave the country within 48 hours, the foreign ministry said.
The 14 "ex-diplomats" worked for Libya's embassy before it was shut about a month ago, said a ministry spokesman. They have been deemed "persona non grata," and that they have between 24 to 48 hours to leave France, the ministry said in a statement, without elaborating.
France has recognized Libya's opposition movement, and has been a major backer of a NATO-led military mission aimed to protect civilians from an onslaught by Gadhafi's forces.
In Rome on Thursday, members from the 22-nation Contact Group on Libya agreed to set up an internationally monitored fund that the rebels can access to provide basic services to the Libyan people.
The United States said it would move to free up at least some of the more than US$30 billion it has frozen in Libyan assets, while other attendees agreed to start a new fund to supply civilians with food, medicine and even paychecks.
The opposition has outlined a political transition for the country if and when Gadhafi falls, announcing at the conference plans to install an interim government while a constitution is drafted and parliamentary elections held.
The move to bolster the rebels and plot a Gadhafi-free future for Libya came despite a virtual military stalemate on the ground.
A US and now NATO-led bombing campaign launched in mid-March has kept Gadhafi's forces from advancing to the east, but has failed to give the rebels a clear battlefield advantage.
The 14 "ex-diplomats" worked for Libya's embassy before it was shut about a month ago, said a ministry spokesman. They have been deemed "persona non grata," and that they have between 24 to 48 hours to leave France, the ministry said in a statement, without elaborating.
France has recognized Libya's opposition movement, and has been a major backer of a NATO-led military mission aimed to protect civilians from an onslaught by Gadhafi's forces.
In Rome on Thursday, members from the 22-nation Contact Group on Libya agreed to set up an internationally monitored fund that the rebels can access to provide basic services to the Libyan people.
The United States said it would move to free up at least some of the more than US$30 billion it has frozen in Libyan assets, while other attendees agreed to start a new fund to supply civilians with food, medicine and even paychecks.
The opposition has outlined a political transition for the country if and when Gadhafi falls, announcing at the conference plans to install an interim government while a constitution is drafted and parliamentary elections held.
The move to bolster the rebels and plot a Gadhafi-free future for Libya came despite a virtual military stalemate on the ground.
A US and now NATO-led bombing campaign launched in mid-March has kept Gadhafi's forces from advancing to the east, but has failed to give the rebels a clear battlefield advantage.
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