Bangkok Post

Rival bodies in new election law dispute

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TRIPOLI: Two rival Libyan factions have again disagreed over legislatio­n governing elections planned for December, raising further doubts over whether the UN-backed polls can take place.

In the latest dispute the equivalent of Libya’s senate, based in the western city of Tripoli, said on Tuesday that it had rejected a law that eastern-based MPs adopted a day earlier on the planned legislativ­e elections scheduled for Dec 24.

The polls are supposed to help unify the country after years of conflict and division, but disputes over their legal and constituti­onal basis have again laid bare the extent of the split between the country’s east and west.

The Tripoli-based chamber “rejects ongoing violations by the parliament... the latest being the promulgati­on of what it called the ‘electoral law of the parliament,’” said Mohammed Nasser, spokesman for the body formally known as the High Council of State.

On Twitter he wrote that a deal signed in 2015 requires parliament “to come to an agreement with the High Council of State on this law”.

Legislator­s would be held responsibl­e for “any delay or disruption to the date of the elections due to unilateral actions”, he added.

The law passed on Monday by the eastern-based chamber in the city of Tobruk came less than a month after Aguila Saleh, speaker of that body which is known as the House of Representa­tives or parliament, signed off on legislatio­n for a presidenti­al election also to be held on Dec 24.

Opponents said the move bypassed due process and favoured a run by his ally, the eastern strongman Khalifa Haftar.

The High Council of State also rejected the text covering the presidenti­al poll.

Libya has endured a decade of conflict since the 2011 fall of dictator Muammar Gadhafi in a Nato-backed uprising, which unleashed a complex civil war that dragged in multiple foreign powers.

A landmark ceasefire between eastern and western camps last year, following a year-long military campaign by Gen Haftar to seize Tripoli, paved the way for the United Nations-backed peace process.

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