Oman Daily Observer

Libya approves executive mechanism

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TRIPOLI: Libyan envoys at Un-backed talks to end nearly a decade of war voted on Tuesday to pass the mechanism to choose an interim executive to govern until polls in December, the UN said.

The UN called it a “significan­t step forward”.

Oil-rich Libya has been torn apart by civil war since the Natobacked uprising that ousted longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi in 2011, with an array of militias filling the vacuum and civilian bodies struggling to impose their authority.

But talks held in the Swiss city of Geneva have brought together 75 delegates — selected by the UN to represent a broad range of constituen­cies — in the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum (LPDF).

“Following the agreement on a proposal for the selection mechanism of a unified executive authority... the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) conducted a one-day voting process’’, the UN said, with the vote running from Monday to Tuesday.

A total of 73 per cent backed the proposal.

Libyans have now a genuine opportunit­y to move past their difference­s and select a temporary govt to reunify their institutio­ns through the long-awaited democratic national elections

STEPHANIE WILLIAMS UN envoy

“Libyans have now a genuine opportunit­y to move past their difference­s and divisions, (and) select a temporary government to reunify their institutio­ns through the long-awaited democratic national elections” on December 24, interim UN envoy Stephanie Williams said.

The UN was “finalising the nomination procedure” and an election timeline, she added.

Libya is currently dominated by a unity government in Tripoli that emerged from previous

Un-led talks in 2015, called the Government of National Accord (GNA), and its rival, the easternbas­ed House of Representa­tives elected the previous year and which never recognised the unity government.

Also on Tuesday, members of the commission drafting a future constituti­on met with delegation­s from the House of Representa­tives and the Tripoli-based High Council of State, which advises the GNA.

The meeting in the Egyptian

Red Sea resort of Hurghada was held to “discuss the constituti­onal arrangemen­ts necessary for the holding of elections on December 24’’, the UN said.

“If you fail to reach an agreement, this will have very negative repercussi­ons on the other tracks including the security and economic situation’’, Williams told the delegates.

Both camps in Libya’s complex war have received extensive backing from foreign powers.

 ?? — AFP ?? A family poses at Martyr’s Square in Libya’s capital Tripoli.
— AFP A family poses at Martyr’s Square in Libya’s capital Tripoli.

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