Saudi Arabia could soon resolve a diplomatic row with Libya triggered by Riyadh's accusation that Libya plotted to kill King Abdullah, Foreign Minister Prince Saud al-Faisal was reported as saying on Saturday.
Al-Hayat newspaper said Prince Saud suggested that Saudi and Libyan ambassadors could be back at their missions in Tripoli and Riyadh in the near future. "There is nothing strange in relations returning to normal," he told the paper. Saudi Arabia asked Libya's ambassador to leave in January 2005 over an alleged plot to assassinate Abdullah in 2003, when he was crown prince, after he clashed with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi at an Arab summit.
Libya has denied involvement in any such plot. A week after he became king last month, Abdullah pardoned several Libyans held in relation to the alleged plot. Saudi security sources said they were about to be put on trial, a step which would have likely strained ties even further. Saudi media reports said the kingdom was holding eight Saudis and five Libyans in the case. "Relations between Saudi Arabia and Libya were not cut," Prince Saud told al-Hayat, adding that only the ambassadors were withdrawn. "Ties between the (Libyan and Saudi) people are normal".
Source: Al Hayat