Breakthrough: Libyan Parties Agree to Hold Elections Within 18 Months

Published November 12th, 2020 - 07:33 GMT
UN acting envoy to Libya Stephanie Williams speaks during a press conference in the Tunisian capital Tunis on November 11, 2020, following 2 days of talks, hosted by the UN on the Libyan conflict. The delegates "reached a preliminary roadmap for ending the transitional period and organising free, fair, inclusive and credible presidential and parliamentary elections," Williams told journalists. After years of conflict sparked by a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, Libya has two rival administrations backed by vario
UN acting envoy to Libya Stephanie Williams speaks during a press conference in the Tunisian capital Tunis on November 11, 2020, following 2 days of talks, hosted by the UN on the Libyan conflict. The delegates "reached a preliminary roadmap for ending the transitional period and organising free, fair, inclusive and credible presidential and parliamentary elections," Williams told journalists. After years of conflict sparked by a 2011 NATO-backed uprising, Libya has two rival administrations backed by various armed groups and foreign powers. Fethi Belaid / AFP
Highlights
Libya has been in chaos since 2011 and divided since 2014 between rival factions in east and west, with major institutions also split or controlled by armed groups.

Political talks on Libya's future have reached agreement on holding elections within 18 months.

The United Nations acting Libya envoy made the announcement on Wednesday, hailing a "breakthrough" in a peacemaking process that still faces great obstacles.

"There's real momentum and that's what we need to focus on and encourage," envoy Stephanie Williams said at a news conference in Tunis, where 75 Libyan participants chosen by the United Nations have been meeting since Monday.

The meeting has reached preliminary agreement on a roadmap to "free, fair, inclusive and credible parliamentary and presidential elections" that also includes steps to unite institutions, she said.

Divided

Libya has been in chaos since 2011 and divided since 2014 between rival factions in east and west, with major institutions also split or controlled by armed groups.

The internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) holds power in the capital Tripoli, while warlord Khalifa Haftar and his illegal militia holds sway in the east.

With both sides riven by political, regional and ideological divisions among the armed factions that back them, and with foreign powers pouring in arms and mercenaries, many Libyans remain sceptical of peacemaking efforts.

However, the Tunis talks follow a ceasefire that the GNA and Haftar's militia agreed to last month in Geneva.

Tunis talks

On Thursday, a joint military commission they established in the flashpoint city of Sirte to hammer out the details of the truce will consider adopting proposals for both sides to withdraw from frontlines.

Thursday's talks in Tunis will focus on a new unified transitional government to oversee the run-up to elections, with participants discussing its "prerogatives and competencies", Williams said.

The new government would have to quickly address deteriorating public services and corruption, two issues that prompted protests on both sides of the frontlines this summer, she added.

The roadmap also outlines steps to begin a process of national reconciliation, transitional justice and address the plight of displaced people, Williams said.

She said Tuesday's assassination of dissident lawyer Hanan al Barassi in Benghazi, Haftar controlled area, "reminds us of the need for Libyans to really end this long period of crisis and division and fragmentation and impunity".

This article has been adapted from its original source.

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