Libya's Brotherhood trying to copy Tunisian model

The Muslim Brotherhood has started making efforts to control Libya's institution as the North African state makes moves towards a long-awaited stability.
The Brotherhood does this
by seeking support from politicians who can help it implement its agenda.
It is learning a lesson
from Tunisia where the Muslim Brotherhood threw its weight behind Moncef Marzouki, a leftist politician who founded a
controversial system that opened the door for many political crises that
continue to beset Tunisia until today.
Election mechanism
The United Nations
mission in Libya will organize a meeting on the election mechanism in the
coming few days.
The meeting will
specifically focus on whether the president will be elected directly by
ordinary Libyans or by the parliament.
The meeting will also
focus on proposed dates for the elections.
The election mechanism in
relation to the president will have deep effects on the nature of the coming
period, observers said.
It will also have an
effect on whether the Libyans will be able to unify their country's
institutions.
The same observers cited
comments by the Head of the Election Commission, Emad al-Sayeh, in which he
alluded to the possibility of approving a mechanism that allows the parliament
to elect the president.
Copying the Tunisian
model
The presidential election
mechanism was the focal point of contention among Libyan politicians who met in
Tunisia recently.
Some of these politicians
favored a proposal for making the election of the president the job of the
president.
However, the proposal has
raised many question marks, especially amid fears that some political forces
will use the mechanism to back specific political figures for the presidential
office to serve their own interests.