Libya awaits new head of UN mission
The United Nations has been trying to bring about a settlement to the Libyan crisis since it started in 2011.
In September of the
same year, the United Nations Security Council passed resolution 2009 to form
the UN Mission in Libya. It mandated the mission to help the Libyans bring
security back to their country and initiate national reconciliation.
One head of mission has
come after another since then. However, none of these people succeeded in
fulfilling the goal of the mission, namely of ending the conflict in Libya. The
North African country continues to reel under unrest, violence and destruction.
Expected envoy
Unanimity on the
appointment of a United Nations envoy to Libya was not easy to reach since
former envoy Ghassan Salamé submitted his
resignation in March.
Nonetheless, the
Security Council decided to appoint Bulgarian diplomat Nickolay Mladenov as the new Libya envoy.
The appointment of a Libya envoy is an urgent matter,
given deteriorating conditions in the country. Salamé left his job amid total
uncertainty in Libya. This raised questions on the reasons behind his
resignation.
Mladenov has a record he made after serving in
different regions, especially areas where conflicts were rife. He joined the
European Union institution early on in his life and then the World Bank. He
worked as Europe's envoy to Iraq, Afghanistan, and the occupied Palestinian
territories. He tried to push what is called as the Middle East peace process
forward. He is an opponent of Israel's settlement building policy.



