Libyan factions hold U.N.-backed peace talks

By Ahmed Elumami TRIPOLI (Reuters) - U.N. negotiators resumed talks on Wednesday with delegates from Libya's warring factions, holding separate meetings with rival parties in the latest attempt to end the OPEC oil producer's political crisis and broker a ceasefire. Libya is caught up in a struggle between an internationally recognised government and a rival administration set up in Tripoli after an armed faction seized the capital last summer. Both are backed by brigades of fighters who helped oust veteran leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011 but have since turned against one another in a complex conflict involving tribes, former Gaddafi troops, Islamist militants and federalist forces. U.N. special envoy Bernardino Leon met representatives of the rival governments in the southern town of Ghadames near the Algerian border. Both governments operate their own parliaments and armed forces in a conflict Western powers fear will slide into broader civil war. "Separate meetings are being held among the participants of the U.N.-sponsored peace talks in Ghadames," said Abdulmenam al-Jarrai, a spokesman for the delegation from the House of Representatives, the internationally recognised parliament. The Twitter account of the U.N. mission in Libya posted pictures of Leon with the delegations and confirmed the separate rounds of talks. The United Nations is first seeking a deal on a unified government, a ceasefire and getting armed groups out of Libya's main cities and key installations. But U.N. officials acknowledge these aims fall well short of ending the crisis. Libya's two largest oil ports, Es Sider and Ras Lanuf, with a combined capacity of around 600,000 barrels per day, have been shut by fighting since December, cutting off vital oil revenues and denting the economy. Keeping any ceasefire or securing a lasting political agreement is complicated by Libya's fragmented politics. The rival factions are essentially loose confederations of different armed groups and political leaders whose loyalties are not always aligned. Analysts also question whether the delegates attending the U.N.-backed talks will be able to bring on board hardliners among the armed groups on the ground who still believe they can gain more from fighting. (Additional reporting by Tom Miles in Geneva; writing by Patrick Markey; Editing by Gareth Jones)