Gulf News

Libyan problems need Libyan solutions

UN’s faintly tedious stance on dialogue and the continued silence of key powers run the risk of being interprete­d as a lack of support for the fight for democracy

- By Richard Galustian | Special to Gulf News

— especially against the backdrop of the deeds-not-words approach the Libyan government and parliament is rolling out — is underminin­g the credibilit­y and integrity of its claims to be committed to the global fight against terrorism in general and Daesh in particular.

The on- the- fence stance of both US and Britain provoked Libya’s democratic­ally- elected parliament, the House of Representa­tives, to release a statement reiteratin­g that Operation Dignity, which is wresting back control of Benghazi from Ansar Al Sharia, was under the official Libyan Army. At this crucial juncture in Libya’s post- revolution­ary fight to preserve the democracy it fought so hard to achieve, the West’s reticence in voicing support for either the military operations in eastern Libya or even the House of Representa­tives itself, is now damaging the credibilit­y of the UK, US and the UN. The United Nations should stop trying to broker ceasefires or political resolution between Libyans. It only exacerbate­s the situation. The Libyans are better capable of finding an answer themselves. What the UN and United Kingdom in particular achieve by their interferen­ce on a political level is to further confuse the situation on the ground by continuing to indirectly empower and tacitly give recognitio­n to the illegitima­te pro- Muslim Brotherhoo­d group holding Tripoli to ransom and aiming to have complete control of western Libya through the coalition Libya Dawn.

But, since much of America and Europe’s political rhetoric and military focus is now on the need to vanquish Daesh ( Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant) in Syria and Iraq, why do these same western politician­s and diplomats refuse to recognise and similarly confront this terror threat on the very shores of the Mediterran­ean? After all, earlier this month, a group in the eastern Libyan town of Derna pledged their allegiance to Daesh, making it the first Daesh franchise in North Africa and there have been reports of other groups, including in Tripoli, following suit.

The UN’s impotency was made clear during a grilling by CNN’s Becky Anderson last week, when UN Special Envoy to Libya, Bernadino Leon, described Daesh in Libya as “not high numbers” and “something manageable”. When further quizzed, he backed down with the feeble, rather contradict­ory statement: “I am not an expert on terrorist issues,” reminding the audience that the UN mandate in Libya was only to promote political dialogue.

One of few redeeming moments in the Leon interview was the comment that the “internatio­nal community needed to work with Libyans to tackle this terrorist issue”. One way this could happen is with practical military help from Nato, which is how the regime change in Libya was achieved in 2011. However, surely, now is exactly the time when a terrorist expert is most needed in Libya — not someone who keeps insisting, in the face of mounting evidence that neither Libya’s internatio­nally- recognised government nor the imposter “government” in Tripoli accepts the UN or the West’s attempts to broker peace. Quite the contrary is the reaction from most Libyans: It is not helping and they should back off.

The UN’s faintly tedious stance on dialogue and the continued silence of key powers run the risk of being interprete­d as a lack of support for Libya’s fight for democracy to prevail over terrorism, whether in the form of balaclava- wearing, gun- toting extremists or suited- and- booted Muslim Brotherhoo­d Islamists. Furthermor­e, as the Libyan ambassador to the UN, Ebrahim Dabbashi, explained, this silence from the West

Stability is crucial

The House of Representa­tives already has support of the UAE and Egypt, with Egyptian President Abdul Fattah Al Sissi just last week calling upon the US and Europe to help the Libyan Army in its fight against Islamist militants. Even if the UN sees Libya’s terrorism problem as still “manageable”, other countries fully- recognise the extent of the threat. Algeria and Tunisia, are taking action as Libya’s stability is crucial.

Perhaps now is the time to start bringing key Libyan revolution­ary- era players back to the fore. Figures such as Dr Mahmoud Jibril and Mustafa Abdul Jalil spring to mind. Jibril was the main force behind gaining internatio­nal legitimacy for the National Transition­al Council in the early days of the revolution. In the first parliament­ary elections, his party, the National Forces Alliance ( NFA), held the largest non- Islamist bloc in Libya’s parliament and he remains an important, though controvers­ial, figure for Libyans. The House of Representa­tives also has a significan­t block of former NFA members that represent some 20 per cent of the parliament. Former members of the NFA could well be amongst those best- placed to find a mediated solution.

Libyan problems require Libyan solutions, not UN or western ones, although Nato’s help in eradicatin­g terrorists — as they are doing in Iraq and Syria — will certainly not go amiss in Libya.

Richard Galustian is a business and security analyst who has lived in Libya since 2011.

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