Dabaiba submits proposal to Libyan parliament to form unity government

Political leaders in Libya are currently intensifying their efforts to give confidence to the new Libyan government to enable it to restore stability to the country. The new Libyan prime minister, Abdul Hamid Dabaiba, presented the Libyan parliament with a proposal for a national unity government and called on the parliament to approve it, emphasizing the fair distribution of ministerial portfolios in implementation of the calls demanding the necessity of representing all three Libyan regions (East, West, and South) to achieve political balance in Libya. The parliament is preparing to hold a session on Monday, March 8, 2021 to give confidence to the new prime minister’s government.
Proposed new government
At a time when political leaders are engaged in a strenuous
travail to give confidence to the new government so that it to exercise its
duties in restoring stability to the war-torn country, Dabaiba presented a
proposal for a government of national unity and called on the parliament to
approve it. He said during a press conference in Tripoli that he took into
account the fair distribution of ministerial portfolios between the west, east
and south of the country, confirming that he had sent a vision about the form
of the government to the Presidency of the House of Representatives.
Regarding the proposal to form a national unity government,
Dabaiba affirmed that he handed over the proposed criteria and draft government
formation to House Speaker Aguila Saleh on Thursday morning, February 25,
stressing that he took into account all the difficult circumstances that the
country has recently emerged from, including wars and divisions in government.
He pointed out that members of the House of Representatives who met with him
promised to grant confidence to his government and are ready to go to any city chosen
by the House of Representatives to hold a session of granting confidence to the
new government.
Representing Libya’s regions
With regard to the representation of the three Libyan
regions, Dabaiba stressed that he took several considerations into account in
forming the government, including the suffering experienced by the Libyan
people due to the wars, conflicts and disagreements that destroyed the country.
He stressed his reliance on consultations with the Political Dialogue Forum,
the House of Representatives, the High Council of State, and many sectors and
entities.
Dabaiba revealed that 3,000 candidates had applied to fill
ministerial positions according to electoral districts divided by 13
constituencies, and he had seen the files of 2,300 of them. He explained that the
assignment of the sovereign positions took into account the equitable
distribution between the eastern, western and southern regions.
The new prime minister said that there are many challenges
facing the Libyan people, the first of which is the corona pandemic, noting
that a crisis team will be formed to confront it. There is also the
reconciliation file, and Dabaiba said his government will cooperate with the
Presidential Council, pointing out that there is great harmony with the members
of the Presidency Council and that they shared their perceptions on the formation
of the government.
Parliament session to grant confidence
The Libyan House of Representatives set Monday, March 8 as
the date to hold a session in the city of Sirte to vote on granting the
national unity government confidence, and if this is not possible, the venue
for the session will be transferred to take place at the temporary headquarters
of the House of Representatives in Tobruk on the same day.
House Speaker Aguila Saleh called for the need for fair
representation of the three historical regions of Libya in forming the
prospective government. During his meeting with German Ambassador to Libya Oliver
Owcza, he discussed political developments in Libya, stressing the need to hold
presidential and parliamentary elections on time without delay and the need to
form the prospective government based on the principle of equitable
distribution between the three regions.
Saleh denied the existence of any prior opposition to the
next government, stressing that a quorum will be available in the session to
grant confidence to the government. He pointed out that there are differences, but
everyone must participate in power to get out of this tunnel, adding that there
is no open opposition with the intention of obstructing.
Dabaiba had hinted at resorting to members of the Political
Dialogue Forum to obtain confidence in the event that the parliament does not
agree and continues to divide over granting confidence to the government, as he
said on Twitter, “We have two options in the process of choosing the formation
of the government, and the lack of consensus among the representatives pushes
us to adopt the second option.”