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Italy's Meloni in Libya to discuss energy, migration

Italy's Meloni in Libya to discuss energy, migration
Meloni is looking to Libya to help make good on her right-wing pledges back home.
2 min read
Meloni has met with GNU prime minister Dbeibah before making 'several stops' in Libya [Getty images]

Populist Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni arrived in the Libyan capital Tripoli on Saturday for talks on energy as well as the thorny issue of migration, Libyan state media said.

Meloni's trip -- her second to a North African country this week -- is the first by a European leader to war-battered Libya since her predecessor Mario Draghi's visit in April 2021.

State television said the Italian premier was received by Abdelhamid Dbeibah, who heads the Tripoli-based, UN-brokered Government of National Unity which is contested by a rival administration in the east.

Libya and its former colonial power Italy are key trade partners, particularly in energy, where Italian giant Eni plays a major role in tapping into Africa's largest known oil reserves.

Meloni was accompanied by Eni chief Claudio Descalzi, who is expected to sign a deal with Libya's National Oil Company to develop two Libyan offshore gas fields.

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Eni will invest $8 million in the two fields, NOC chief Farhat Bengdara said in televised remarks this week, adding they are expected to produce 850 million cubic metres of gas.

Meloni visited Algeria on Monday seeking supply deals from Africa's top gas exporter to help reduce reliance on Russia after it invaded Ukraine last year.

During her trip to Libya, she is also expected to discuss the issue of migration amid rising numbers of irregular migrants from Libya to Italy.

Libya has been wracked by years of conflict and division since a NATO-backed revolt toppled dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.

The country is a conduit for thousands of people each year fleeing conflict and poverty across Africa, seeking refuge across the Mediterranean in Europe.

Meloni's far-right government took office in October, vowing to stop migrant landings in Italy, which reached more than 105,000 in 2022.

The central Mediterranean route is considered the world's most treacherous, according to the International Organization for Migration, which estimated that 1,377 migrants had disappeared on that route last year.

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