THU 21 - 11 - 2024
 
Date: Oct 1, 2018
Source: The Daily Star

Folder: Elections
U.N. envoy says hard to hold Libya elections in December
Imed Lamloum| Agence France Presse
TRIPOLI: The U.N. envoy to Libya said that it would be difficult to hold elections as hoped on Dec. 10, following a new wave of fighting in the North African nation. “There is still a lot to do. It may not be possible to respect the date of December 10,” Ghassan Salame said in an interview with AFP.

Rival Libyan leaders agreed to a Paris-brokered deal in May to hold a nationwide election by the end of the year. But Salame said that the polls may not be organized before three or four months.

“We can hold elections in the near future, yes. But certainly not now,” he added in the interview Saturday evening at the heavily fortified U.N. mission in Tripoli.

Clashes that took place between militias in suburbs of the capital have left more than 100 people dead since late August.

Libya remains divided between the U.N.-backed Government of National Accord based in Tripoli and a rival administration in the east that enjoys support from Egypt and Russia, as well as the United Arab Emirates.

The GNA was set up under a 2015 U.N.-brokered deal that raised hopes of an easing of the chaos that followed the 2011 NATO-backed armed uprising which ousted Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi.

The Paris meeting brought together for the first time GNA head Fayez al-Sarraj and military strongman Khalifa Haftar, whose self-styled Libyan National Army dominates the country’s east.

Also present were Aguila Saleh Issa, the parliament speaker based in the eastern city of Tobruk, and Khalid al-Mishri, the head of the High Council of State.

The Paris agreement had set a Sept. 16 deadline for conditions to be met for parliamentary and presidential elections to be held by the end of this year.

This was to be based on a new constitution that would have to be put to a referendum, as well as a new electoral law.

But many observers have said the timetable was overly ambitious given ongoing instability and territorial disputes across the country, along with an economy that is flagging despite Libya’s vast oil wealth.

The United Nations is hoping that elections will help turn the page on years of chaos in Libya.

France called Monday for stronger U.N. sanctions on Libyans who stand in the way of a political solution.

The clashes that erupted on Tripoli’s southern outskirts on Aug. 27 were between rival militias both from and outside the capital.

The U.N. brokered a cease-fire on Sept. 4, but the fighting resumed within days.

By the time the guns fell silent again Wednesday, the fighting had left at least 117 dead and more than around 400 wounded, according to the GNA.

Salame said the hopes of holding polls in December were made more “difficult” by the delayed adoption of the electoral law, which finally happened last week.

“If everything goes well, the referendum could take place before the end of the year,” but the elections could only be organized in “three to four months” depending on the security situation, the envoy said.

“We still need a parliamentary electoral law and another for the presidential [elections],” the Lebanese diplomat said.

Salame said there were also logistical problems after a deadly suicide attack by Daesh (ISIS) had severely damaged the headquarters of the electoral commission.

The attack has “greatly delayed” the work of the commission whose offices would soon be moved, he said. Once it relocates, the commission would be set to launch a new voter registration campaign “in the coming weeks.”

Salame said the U.N. Support Mission in Libya was helping the GNA to sift through thousands of people civilian and militia to be registered as regular security forces.

Some of them could become regular police officers, but “there will be militiamen who will have to look for a job elsewhere,” the envoy said.

On the political front, Salame reaffirmed his support for the GNA, while stressing the need to reform it.


 
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