Libya islamists in talks to end armed struggle

Islamists in talks to end armed struggle, according to report

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Tripoli: Jailed leaders of Libya's main Islamist hardline group are talking to the government about abandoning their armed struggle, a former senior member of the organisation said in remarks published on Sunday.

Noaman Othmane said the Al Qaida-linked Fighting Islamic Group in Libya (FIGL), which aims to overthrow the government of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi and set up purist Islamic rule, is "practically defunct", pan-Arab daily Asharq Al Awsat reported.

Speaking after a visit to imprisoned members of the group in Tripoli's Abu Salim prison last week, Othmane said the men would soon reach "new convictions that condemn armed violence after Libyan security had offered facilities for dialogue and the revision of thinking", the newspaper reported.

The FIGL announced its presence in 1995, vowing to topple Gaddafi and launching a violent campaign in the country. In November 2007, Al Qaida's second-in-command Ayman Al Zawahri said the group had joined the hardline organisation.

The newspaper said the Gaddafi Foundation charity chaired by Saif Al Islam, one of Gaddafi's sons, had been involved in the talks between the FIGL leaders and Othmane, whom the newspaper described as based in London.

In April, Libyan authorities released 90 FIGL members from prison after talks between the movement and the foundation. The freed men represented one third of the group's members still held in Libyan jails, the foundation said at the time.

Abu Salim was the scene of riots in October 2006 in which one prisoner died and 17 were injured in clashes with guards and police.

In June 1996 several people were killed when police clashed with hundreds of political prisoners at the prison, Libyan authorities announced at the time.

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