Kuwait Times

No end in sight to Libya crisis as UN envoy quits

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TRIPOLI, Libya: The abrupt resignatio­n of the United Nations special envoy for Libya, Abdoulaye Bathily, is the latest sign of the failure of reconcilia­tion efforts in the war-torn North African country, analysts told AFP. The Senegalese diplomat, who on Tuesday tendered his resignatio­n after only 18 months at the helm of the UN support mission UNSMIL, has repeatedly accused rival leaders of perpetuati­ng divisions to serve their own interests.

Libya is still struggling to recover from years of war and chaos after the 2011 overthrow of longtime dictator Muammar Gaddafi, and the country remains split between a UN-recognized government based in Tripoli and a rival administra­tion in the country’s east. Speaking to reporters after submitting his resignatio­n to UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who accepted it, Bathily said the situation has deteriorat­ed in recent months. Taking aim at leaders in the country that has seen repeated cycles of violence since 2011, the diplomat decried a “lack of political will and good faith by the major Libyan actors who are comfortabl­e with the current stalemate”.

General elections scheduled for December 2021 were postponed indefinite­ly amid persistent disagreeme­nts between Abdelhamid Dbeibah’s Tripoli-based government and the eastern-based administra­tion backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar. “The selfish resolve of current leaders to maintain the status quo through delaying tactics and maneuvers at the expense of the Libyan people must stop,” Bathily said, also condemning the foreign backers of both camps without naming them.

To Jalel Harchaoui, an associate fellow at British think-tank Royal United Services Institute, Bathily’s resignatio­n did not come as a shock “for the simple reason that the process he was leading had been completely defunct for several months”.

‘Inflection point’

Harchaoui said that Bathily’s efforts have been undermined by Egypt, which alongside the United Arab Emirates is the main power supporting the Haftarback­ed administra­tion. The western-based authoritie­s are most notably backed by Turkey. “This situation is the result of numerous factors, including Egypt’s policy of systematic­ally contradict­ing the relatively coherent logic that Bathily was trying to instill,” the Libya expert said.

And faced by “sabotage” from Cairo, “the great Western democracie­s like the United States or France have never supported Bathily in any authentic manner, preferring to passively avoid offending the Egyptian giant”, argued Harchaoui.

Emad Badi, a Libya expert at the Atlantic Council, said that “Bathily’s departure comes at an undeniable inflection point whereby the veneer of stability that prevailed in Libya over the past couple of years is vanishing.” Until a successor is named, US diplomat Stephanie Khoury, who in March was named Bathily’s deputy for political affairs, will serve in an interim capacity — a repeat of the scenario that unfolded after former envoy Ghassan Salame’s resignatio­n in 2020.

Stephanie Williams, also from the United States, was able to bring together Libyan representa­tives in February 2021, while she was serving as an interim replacemen­t for Salame. That meeting, in Geneva, saw representa­tives agree on an interim authority to organize the presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections which were due to be held at the end of 2021.

Harchaoui said it was “quite likely” that Khoury would “emerge as an interim special envoy”, allowing “the United States to lead UNSMIL without having to face a Russian veto at the Security Council”. — AFP

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