You are here
‘Libya gov’t meeting soon to back power-sharing plan’
By AFP - Apr 10,2016 - Last updated at Apr 10,2016
CAIRO — Libya's internationally recognised parliament will meet "in the coming weeks" to give its backing to a UN-backed unity government aimed at ending chaos in the country, its speaker said on Sunday.
An agreement for a power-sharing unity government was inked in December by lawmakers from Libya's rival parliaments but neither administration has so far formally backed the UN-brokered accord.
"The parliament will meet in the coming weeks to consider an amendment to its constitutional declaration to give a vote of confidence to the national unity government," Aguila Saleh said during a visit to Cairo.
Libya has had two rival administrations since mid-2014 when a militia alliance overran Tripoli, setting up its own authority and forcing the internationally recognised parliament to flee to the country's east.
The head of a UN-backed administration, prime minister-designate Fayez Al Sarraj, arrived earlier this month in Tripoli after weeks of delay to begin garnering support for his government.
He struggled however to assert his authority as the unofficial authority in control of Tripoli said it wouldn't support Sarraj's government after initially indicating its backing.
The unity government needs the internationally recognised parliament's approval before its mandate begins.
Libya's warring rivals have come under intense international pressure to rally behind the unity government at a time when the country is grappling with a growing militant threat.
The EU has imposed sanctions on Saleh, as well as the Tripoli government's prime minister Khalifa Ghweil and the head of the capital's General National Congress Nuri Abu Sahmein.
Related Articles
TUNIS — UN envoy Martin Kobler expressed concerns Wednesday that Libya's political process is slower than the Daesh terror group's expansion
UNITED NATIONS, United States — UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said Monday he was horrified by video footage showing migrants sold as
AMMAN – Several years after receiving batches of injured Libyans who came to Jordan seeking treatment during the civil war, private hospital