GNA prone to collapse as conflicts rage on inside it
 
A new crisis is looming inside the Libyan Presidential Council, which is headed by the prime minister of the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord Fayez al-Sarraj.
The crisis is made possible by
recent remarks by al-Sarraj's deputy Ahmed Metig who accused the GNA prime
minister of manipulating the Presidential Council and monopolizing
decision-making inside it. 
Metig even warned that the
Presidential Council might be teetering on the edge of collapse. 
He said al-Sarraj takes all the
decisions inside the council, without consulting other council members. He even
alluded to the presence of corruption inside the council.
Metig called on August 7 for
opening an investigation into the money squandered by the GNA in the past
period. 
He called on Libyan citizens to
get out to the streets to protest the failures of the GNA. 
Metig also asked GNA Interior
Minister Fathi Bashagha to protect the demonstrators. 
As prime minister, Metig said,
al-Sarraj does not have the right to monopolize decision-making. 
He added that the 2015 Skhirat
Agreement gives al-Sarraj a limited mandate.
This means that he does not have
the right to be the absolute arbiter inside the Presidential Council, Metig said
of al-Sarraj. 
Roots of the conflict
Internal and external reasons
stand behind current conflicts within the Presidential Council. 
There are different poles of
power in western Libya. These poles are competing for influence and control
inside the council. 
They include influential people
and tribes in Misrata. Metig himself is one of these poles. The militias
operating inside Tripoli also want to practice their own control and influence.
The Muslim Brotherhood also pulls
the strings from behind the curtain.
On the other hand, the
international community was in a hurry to recognize the GNA and al-Sarraj.
Nonetheless, in doing this, the same international community has overlooked the
provisions of the Skhirat Agreement which limits the authority of the GNA prime
minister and necessitates the presence of power-sharing inside the Presidential
Council. 
Collapse
Libyan political analyst Mohamed
al-Raiesh believes the current conflicts within the Presidential Council can
lead to the collapse of the council itself. 
The council, he said, was
significantly weakened by the resignation of some of its members. 
"The fact that Metig is
turning from an ally to an enemy of al-Sarraj is also seminal," al-Raiesh
said.
He said Metig hails from Misrata
which has a lot of political and military weight in Libya. 
"This change will
significantly undermine the power al-Sarraj has," al-Raiesh said. 
          
     
                               
 
 


