The Libyan authorities condemned the threats of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi to intervene in Libya, stressing their refusal to meet with Cairo, which brought Sisi together with figures who said they represented Libyan tribes.

The head of the Supreme Council of State in Libya, Khaled al-Mashri, explained that the threats of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi do not mean anything to the Libyans.

Al-Mashri added, in a tweet on Twitter, that referring to what he described as a group of clients who represent only themselves as representatives of the Libyan people; It shows the level of failure in Egyptian politics, as he put it.

The Libyan official stated that the Libyans are continuing to build a sovereign, democratic state.

For his part, the Minister of the Interior of the Libyan reconciliation government, Fathi Pashaga, said - in a tweet on Twitter - that the government has strong reservations about the fallacies in the Cairo meeting with those who claim to represent the Libyan tribes, as he put it.

Pashaga affirmed that the reconciliation government will not accept diminishing the Libyan sovereignty, or bypassing the legitimate government, considering that the leadership in Egypt must realize that its interests are with the legitimate government in Libya, adding that stability in Libya is stability in Egypt.

The member of the presidential council of the Al-Wefaq government, Amari Zayed, said that the national reconciliation government continues to extend its influence and protect Libya's national security from any threat, explaining that Sisi’s statements regarding training the tribes are a deportation of Egypt's internal problems.

Zayed said that the legitimacy of the Al-Wefaq government is rooted in its international alliances, and it continues to extend its influence over the entire Libyan soil.

The spokesman condemned the interventions contained in the Cairo meeting, and considered it a continuation of al-Sisi's aggressive approach against Libya and its people, noting that Tripoli rejects the Cairo meeting and will prosecute the participants in it.

And Egyptian President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi said that his country would not allow Libya to become a hotbed of terrorism, even if that costed direct Egyptian intervention.

Al-Sisi added, in a meeting with the sheikhs of some Libyan tribes in Cairo, that Egypt would not stand idle if its red lines were crossed.

Libya has previously submitted a request to the UN Security Council to hold a hearing for the sanctions committee for Libya to discuss ongoing violations of the arms embargo by the UAE and other countries.

And Sudanese sources reported that a joint security force on the border strip with Libya arrested 160 people who were going to fight in Libya as mercenaries, including foreigners.

The commander of the Rapid Support Forces in North Darfur expressed his complete refusal to send the sons of Sudan to fight in Libya.

Meanwhile, the Director General of North Darfur State Police praised the efforts of the joint forces in drying the area from human traffickers and cross-border crimes.