"The Committee expressed its deep concern over continued external interference in Libya's internal affairs, motivated by selfish interests, which continues to undermine efforts to establish a permanent and unconditional ceasefire," the Committee said in a text following a weekend AU summit in Niger.
The Committee "proposed the appointment of a Joint Special Envoy of the AU and the United Nations to strengthen the coordination of efforts between the two organisations, on the basis of a single road map", the document said.
It added the envoy would provide "unified support to Libyan peace efforts".
African delegations and media had been waiting for a statement following the weekend AU summit in the Nigerien capital Niamey.
The absence of one had been widely taken as fueling doubts the leaders would be able to agree on a unified position over the Libyan crisis.
AU diplomatic sources said the meeting was particularly "tense", with Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi - the AU's current president - reluctant to participate in talks, leaving his Foreign Minister Sameh Choukri to represent Egypt.
The nomination of a joint envoy to aid UN support mission head for Libya, Ghassan Salame, had been discussed prior to the Niamey summit, a diplomatic source said.
The sources said the talks' conclusions would have to be signed off by all parties before being publicly released.
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