Gulf Today

UN to hold conference on Libya

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The United Nations said on Wednesday it will organise an all-party conference next month to draw up a “roadmap” to lead Libya toward elections and out of the chaos in which it has plunged since a 2011 revolution.

The national conference aims to fix dates for legislativ­e and presidenti­al elections in the North African state, which has been torn apart by military, political and tribal feuds since the Nato-backed uprising that ousted longtime ruler Moamer Kadhafi.

“We will invite all Libya’s political categories, without exception,” UN envoy Ghassan Salame told a news conference in Tripoli.

He said between 120 and 150 delegates were expected to participat­e in the forum in the central city of Ghadames on April 14-16, which has been agreed following consultati­ons and meetings in 57 towns across the country.

The conference will also try to reach decisions on a new constituti­on and set target dates for legislativ­e texts, which have been delayed by Libya’s two rival administra­tions.

The UN’S Libya mission UNSMIL said the country’s unity government leader Fayez al-sarraj and military strongman Khalifa Hatar agreed at a meeting in Abu Dhabi last month to work toward organizing elections.

Addressing the UN Security Council via video-conference from Tripoli, Salame insisted that the sides were now commited to resolving their power dispute through elections.

“Many of these principles are not new,” he said. “What is new is the sincerity to turn these words into the end of the transition­al period through elections.”

Libya’s rival leaders agreed last year to hold elections before December 10, 2018 under a French plan, but that vote never materializ­ed.

Sarraj’s Government of National Accord, based in Tripoli, is rejected by a rival administra­tion in the east of the country that is backed by Haftar’s self-styled Libyan National Army.

Persistent instabilit­y, territoria­l disputes and political divisions in the oil-rich state have delayed the implementa­tion of a past accord to hold elections and unify Libya’s institutio­ns.

Salame told the council that the Libyan people wanted an end to divisions but that they were “up against powerful forces, which have materially profited from the country’s chaos and division and are therefore loath to work towards a unificatio­n.”

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