Italian right-wing Interior Minister Matteo Salvini said he is to put a Libyan proposal on tackling the migration issue before European leaders at a summit on Thursday.

“We will convey to the European leaders that Libya is not a problem but a great opportunity,” Salvini said at a press conference in Tripoli with the Libyan deputy prime minister, Ahmed Maitig.

No details of the Libyan proposals were given, other than that European leaders would be invited to a conference on migration in Tripoli in September.

Salvini praised the Libyan coastguard for its work, adding in a now-familiar tone that it should only by the Libyan authorities who patrolled Libyan waters, "blocking the way for NGOs that want to substitute governments and help illegal migrants".  

He said there was a need to safeguard the frontiers to the south of Libya because neither Libya or Italy could be alone in shouldering the burden of illegal immigration.

Mr Maitig said the Libyan programme on migration was based on a partnership between Libya and the European Union. He insisted that Libya categorically refused the presence of any immigration camps in Libya because that was unacceptable under Libyan law.

"The programme should be Libyan and the participation of European countries should be within this programme," he said.

Humanitarian organisations have consistently highlighted that Libya is unable to guard its huge coast, especially as the country remains torn among factions with human traffickers capitalising on the chaos. 

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