Diplomatic sources said the two sides had agreed on a joint statement at the talks in a chateau outside Paris but that the text being circulated was not the final version. The 10-point version seen by AFP says the ceasefire would not apply to counter-terrorism efforts. It also says the two sides are committed to developing the rule of law in a country where dozens of armed groups have proliferated in the power vacuum created by the toppling of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.
Macron, who has made Libya one of his foreign policy priorities, organised the meeting as he seeks to raise France's international diplomatic profile. While officials admit they have modest expectations, they say the fact the two rivals are at least in the same room sends a "strong signal". French officials are aiming to persuade the two sides to agree on a roadmap to end a conflict that has plunged the oil-rich country into chaos since Kadhafi's fall.
France, under then president Nicolas Sarkozy, was one of the Western nations that pushed hardest for the Nato air strikes that hastened Kadhafi's demise. The newly appointed UN envoy for Libya, Ghassan Salame, chaired the talks. Macron was to make a statement at the end.
Copyright Agence France-Presse, 2017