Libyan Tabu tribes rejected what they said was an Emirati proposal to settle the crimes committed by Abu Dhabi and retired Major General Khalifa Hifter, out of legal means and in secret. Fayez al-Sarraj, chairman of the Presidential Council of the National Accord government, said that the aggressor is no longer a partner in the political solution, referring to Hifter.

The Tabu Sultan Ahmed I said in a statement that the UAE threatened a delegation of Tabu in a meeting on its territory, to continue targeting Tabu areas if they reject the settlement proposal.

The statement added that the UAE was involved in the crimes committed against Tabu in Libya, as the author of the compromise proposal with Hifter, and stressed the continued prosecution of Abu Dhabi and moral.

The Tabu are an important part of Libyan society, and their speculators are in the south of the country, stretching across the border into neighboring Chad, and fought battles against Hifter's forces during their control of their strongholds in southern Libya late last year.

Roll back aggression
This comes at a time when Sarraj - during a meeting with Italian Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte in the capital of Rome - what he called to defeat the aggression and end his project to militarize the state.

Al-Sarraj expressed appreciation for Italy's rejection of the aggression and support for the democratic process in Libya.

For his part, Conte stressed during the meeting that there is no military solution to the Libyan crisis, and Italy's keenness to find a political solution to achieve stability and the development and development of relations of cooperation between the two countries, according to a statement to the press office of Serag.

The Italian Prime Minister welcomed the Serag initiative, which would hold a Libyan forum leading to a comprehensive solution agreed upon by the Libyans.

Since April 4, Hifter's forces have launched an offensive to take control of the capital, Tripoli, where the internationally recognized government of national reconciliation is based.

But to date, Hifter's forces have failed to achieve their goal, despite limited field gains at the start of the offensive, with their recent decline proven and losing much of their control.

The United Nations is seeking an international conference, in a new attempt to find a political solution to the years-long conflict in the oil-rich country.