France confirmed yesterday that it was in indirect talks with the Gaddafi regime but denied claims that it was trying "directly" to negotiate a settlement of the Libyan conflict.
Any solution must involve the departure from power of Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, the Foreign Ministry said.
Paris was trying to clarify a series of apparently conflicting comments by French ministers before a parliamentary vote today on France's continuing involvement in the United Nations-Nato bombing campaign in Libya.
French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet said on Monday that the rebels should be ready to talk to the Tripoli Government, even if Gaddafi was in "another room in the palace" - an apparent weakening of the French, and Nato, position.
Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said yesterday Paris remained adamant that Gaddafi must go. "The question is not whether he leaves power but how and when," he said.
The confusion was compounded by one of Gaddafi's sons, Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, who told an Algerian newspaper yesterday that Paris was in serious negotiations with Tripoli on an end to the conflict.
Amid persistent rumours that President Nicolas Sarkozy had demanded a Libyan "breakthrough" which he could announce to the nation tomorrow - Bastille Day - the comments produced a flurry of speculation and even a kind of repudiation by Washington.
A French Foreign Ministry spokesman, Bernard Valero, said yesterday that there had been no change in France's position. Paris was passing "messages" to Tripoli through the rebel National Transition Council, as it had been doing for weeks, he said.
It was not taking part in direct negotiations with the Gaddafi Government.
- Independent
France denies claims of talks with Gaddafi regime
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