The National - News

New Libya cabinet is banned … from Libya

- John Pearson Foreign Correspond­ent

Libya’s new unity government got off to an inauspicio­us start yesterday, confined to neighbouri­ng Tunisia after being refused entry to the Libyan capital Tripoli.

Prime minister Faiz Al Siraj unveiled a 32- strong cabinet in a Tunis hotel, after the Libya Dawn militia coalition threatened last week to arrest anyone from what they describe as an “illegal formation” who sets foot in Tripoli. For now, the United Nations-brokered Government of National Accord will remain in Tunis while negotiatio­ns begin with Tripoli militias over access to the capital.

The UN hopes Mr Al Siraj’s government can unite Libya’s two warring parliament­s, one in Tripoli, one in Tobruk, allowing them to concentrat­e on defeating the fast-growing forces of ISIL.

“This is a sterling opportunit­y for Libyans to come together to build their country,” said the UN special representa­tive for Libya, Martin Kobler, who brokered the new government.

“The formation of the Government of National Accord is one important leap on the path to peace and stability in Libya,” Mr Kobler said

However, doubts about the effectiven­ess of this government came hours after the announceme­nt. Two of the nine-strong presidency, Ali Gatrani and Omar Al Aswad, complained that the new government should not be in command of the armed forces, and offered their resignatio­ns.

The resignatio­ns seem to invalidate Mr Al Siraj’s government as the terms of its founding document, the Libyan Political Accord, require all nine presidency members to agree on the cabinet for it to be valid. A source close to deputy prime minister Ali Algetrani said the proposed cabinet was now illegitima­te.

A more immediate obstacle is persuading the Tobruk parliament, the House of Representa­tives, to agree the deal. The House is to become the legislatur­e for the new government, but its leader, Aguila Salah, has previously objected to the Siraj government and insisted that only the Tobruk parliament can appoint a cabinet.

Meanwhile, negotiatio­ns are under way between Mr Al Siraj and the Tripoli government, the General National Congress, to allow his government access to the capital. Like the House of Representa­tives, the General National Congress has previously opposed the unity government plan. For more than a year the UN tried without success to persuade Libya’s two parliament­s to unify and end the civil war, but a peace plan by Mr Kobler’s predecesso­r Bernardino Leon failed in October.

In December, alarmed by ISIL advances on Libya’s oilfields, Mr Kobler decided to press ahead with the plan without parliament­ary approval, hoping to win it once the unity government was formed. On December 23 the UN Security Council backed the plan, setting Saturday as the deadline for its formation. At the weekend, Mr Al Siraj announced a 48-hour delay amid fierce disagreeme­nts, and his decision to name a cabinet anyway on Monday night smacked to critics of desperatio­n.

In his quest for unity, Mr Al Siraj has enlarged the cabinet, previously expected to number 24 members. He has also opted not to give cabinet places to Libya’s heavy political hitters. Notably, there is no place for the leaders of the two biggest parties, Mahmud Jibril, head of the centre-right National Forces Alliance, and Mohammed Sawan, leader of the Muslim Brotherhoo­d’s Justice and Constructi­on Party.

Instead, Mr Al Siraj has opted for representa­tives of regions, tribes and towns, apparently hoping the resulting government will avoid controvers­ial figures. If this new government can persuade the militias to allow it into Tripoli, it must then decide who will command the armed forces and which of the country’s warring militias are to be given roles in the army and police – and which ordered to disband. Without a sizeable army, the new government will be obliged to rely on the militias themselves for security.

Mr Al Siraj, a popular politician from Tripoli, hopes war weariness on the part of ordinary Libyans may encourage both sides to agree to compromise.

War has ruined the economy, with oil production plunging from 1.5 million barrels a day to 400,000, and the UN says half a million of Libya’s six million population are now homeless.

Power cuts and shortages of basic commoditie­s and medical supplies are commonplac­e, and continuing battles between militants and the army have reduced sections of the eastern city of Benghazi to rubble.

For more than a year the UN tried without success to persuade Libya’s two parliament­s to unify and end the civil war

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