Rifts appearing within GNA amid reports of corruption
 
Rifts are appearing between the prime minister of the Tripoli-based Government (GNA) Fayez al-Sarraj, on one hand, and Ahmed Metig, one of his deputies, and Abdel Salam Kajman, another senior GNA official, on the other.
These rifts are opening the door for revelations about
corruption within the GNA. 
Deteriorating living conditions in Tripoli are,
meanwhile, giving rise to opposition to the policies of the GNA which is backed
by Turkey. Those expressing opposition to the policies of the government also
call for improving basic services in the Libyan capital. 
The situation in Tripoli took a new turn when Metig
denounced conditions in it and asked citizens to take to the streets to protest
and call for bringing corrupt government officials to account. 
He asked the GNA Interior Ministry to protect the
demonstrators. 
However, al-Sarraj imposed a state of emergency in the
Libyan capital to prevent citizens from taking to the streets and protesting. 
Calls were made on social media on August 7 for staging
an uprising against the GNA and its representatives. 
Some people even called for bringing the Tripoli-based
government down because of deteriorating basic services in the Libyan capital. 
They referred to the accumulation of wastes on the
streets of Tripoli and an unprecedented rise in the prices of basic
commodities. 
The mandate given the Libyan Investment Corporation is
also fueling debates in Tripoli. 
Kajman, a deputy of al-Sarraj, denounced on August 6 the
GNA prime minister's total control over the corporation. 
He called on al-Sarraj to change his conduct. Kajman also
called for changing the formation of the corporation as well as the laws
regulating its work. 
This caused Abdel Baset Marawan, the commander of what is
known as the Tripoli Military Zone, an affiliate of the GNA, to criticize
Kajman and Metig. He accused them of working to sabotage the work of the GNA. 
Marawan also declared support to the Presidential Council
which is also headed by al-Sarraj. 
He accused the two men of serving the interests of
regional powers that want to bring the Presidential Council down. 
          
     
                               
 
 


