TRIPOLI, Libya
Libyan leaders are slated to meet in Morocco on Monday to finalize a deal on new electoral laws, but any agreement they announce on voting rules or a new interim government is likely to trigger opposition that may further delay the political process.
House of Representatives (HoR)
head Aguila Saleh and High State Council (HSC) head Khaled al-Mishri left for
Morocco early in the morning and were hoping to wrap up an agreement, an HoR
member and Meshri's spokesperson said.
The two would likely present
any deal as a major breakthrough after months of paralysis - U.N. envoy
Adoulaye Bathily has said there could be national elections by the end of the
year if a deal is reached this month.
However, 61 HoR members and
some HSC members have already objected to the way their leaders have been
negotiating their agreement, and have said they will oppose its ratification.
Disputes over fundamental
constitutional issues including the role of a president and parliament, and
over key questions of electoral law including the eligibility of divisive
candidates, have long challenged Libya's political process.
The country has had little
peace or security since the 2011 NATO-backed uprising that ended four decades
of rule by Moammar Gaddafi. Libya split in 2014 between warring eastern and
western factions that still control most territory.
Since the main factions agreed
a ceasefire in 2020, peace efforts have focused on pushing for national
elections to create governing institutions with broad political legitimacy that
the existing bodies are widely seen to lack.
The HoR was elected as a
national parliament in 2014 to a four-year term. The HSC was created as part of
a political agreement in 2015 from members of an earlier interim parliament
elected in 2012.
The Government of National
Unity in Tripoli under Prime Minister Abdulhamid al-Dbeibah was created in 2021
as part of a U.N.-backed process, but it was only supposed to govern until
national elections that were planned for the end of that year.
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