UN statement on Libya
Batili, who met members of the House of Representatives (TM) in Tripoli, the Libyan capital, said in a statement on his Twitter account after the meeting that council members shared their views with him to move forward in the political process. forward.
“Members of parliament expressed concern about the continuing political deadlock and its repercussions on Libya’s security, stability and unity.” Batili, using the expression, noted that Libyan deputies wanted the unification of state institutions as a prerequisite for breaking out of the political deadlock in the country.
Batili stressed that in order to reach the constitutional framework for the elections as soon as possible, the TM and the Libyan Supreme Council of State must have positive and constructive contributions and that all administrators must meet the expectations of 2.8 million Libyans who will vote.
DILMA ELECTIONS IN LIBYA
At the United Nations-led Libyan Political Dialogue Forum meetings in November 2020, it was decided to hold the presidential and parliamentary elections in the country on December 24, 2021, but the elections could not be held as scheduled.
The Tobruk House of Representatives elected Fethi Başağa as Prime Minister on February 10, 2022, in a session that was not attended by the majority of deputies from the west of the country, claiming that the mandate of the current National Unity Government expired on Dec. 24. , 2021. On March 1, he gave a vote of confidence to the Başağa government.
The Prime Minister of Libya’s Government of National Unity, Abdulhamid Dibeybe, accused the House of Representatives of deviating from the road map laid out in the Geneva Agreement, saying he was at his post and would leave the task to an elected government alone. . .
While Libya’s Supreme Council of State wants dual citizens and soldiers to be barred from running for president, TM insists that this be allowed.