Libya's North African neighbors, afraid of the country's further descent into chaos, are
planning an urgent meeting to co-ordinate border controls and tamp down
the unrest they fear will spread.
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| Tunisian security forces secure the area after gunmen attacked Tunis' famed Bardo Museum. |
A senior Algerian diplomat,
Abdelkader Messahel, called on Sunday for the meeting in Tunisia. He
said Libya should install its newly proposed government quickly "and
restore order to this country." The 18-member Libyan government must
still be approved by parliament, which rejected a previous proposal.
Tunisia,
the only country to emerge from the Arab Spring uprisings with a
democracy, has suffered multiple attacks at the hands of Islamic State
extremists trained in Libya, and officials there fear contagion from
Libya's instability.
Algeria also has fought ongoing battles with
Islamic extremists, and both countries fear Western military
intervention will exacerbate the problem.
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