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Repsol to resume Libya activity once security allows: Spanish FM

Spanish Foreign Minister Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo gives a press conference on April 28, 2016 in Tripoli

Spanish oil giant Repsol is ready to resume activity in Libya once the security situation allows it, Spain's foreign minister said Thursday during a visit to Tripoli.

Jose Manuel Garcia-Margallo was in Tripoli to demonstrate Spain's support for a new UN-backed Libyan government.

"Repsol is ready to resume production as soon as an accord is finalised," Garcia-Margallo said during a press conference after meeting the head of the unity government, Fayez al-Sarraj.

Libya's warring rivals have come under intense international pressure to rally behind the unity government at a time when the country is grappling with a growing jihadist threat.

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Prime minister-designate Sarraj's cabinet has taken control of eight government ministries including foreign affairs as it seeks to assert its authority over the violence-plagued country.

But his government has still not been endorsed by a vote of confidence from the internationally recognised parliament in Tobruk.

Repsol has operated in oil-rich Libya since 1975, and was pumping 340,000 barrels per day before it ceased activity in the country in 2014 due to security concerns.

Garcia-Margallo said the company would be able to produce 100,000 bpd at the Al-Sharara plant in south Libya once the situation stabilised.

Spain's foreign minister said he and Sarraj discussed"the intensification of cooperation in the fight against illegal migration and against terrorism".

A host of Western diplomats have been to Tripoli to show support for Sarraj's fledgling administration.