Dbeibeh Accuses Local Parties of Seeking New War in Libya

Prime Minister of Libya’s Government of National Unity (GNU) Abdulhamid Dbeibeh accused local parties of seeking to reignite war by disrupting public services and electricity.
Several Libyan areas suffered
sudden power cut on Friday, prompting Dbeibeh to inspect the General
Electricity Company.
The PM stressed that his
government will spare no effort in providing electric power, facilitating
financial procedures and concluding new contracts.
He urged citizens to protect the
electric power grid and ordered the Interior Minister to open a probe into the
matter in all affected areas.
He further called for connecting
the power grids in eastern and western Libya, noting that this could only be
implemented by opening the coastal road between Sirte and Misrata cities.
The General Electricity Company
had announced a complete power outage for two consecutive days in the eastern
region and in most of the western region areas due to an explosion.
The company later said that 90
percent of the power plants had been restored.
In a visit to Tajoura city in
Tripoli, Dbeibeh stressed that those who “ignite war, cause power cuts, create
problems in the queues outside gas stations and prevent us from communicating
with people across Libya are the enemies of the Libyan people.”
He warned of whom he described as
“war merchants,” stressing that many have amassed their fortune from this war.
Dbeibeh said his foreign tours are
aimed at restoring Libya’s unity and sovereignty and expelling mercenaries.
Some sources interpreted his
comments as an escalation in his silent dispute with Marshall Khalifa Haftar in
eastern Libya.
“We couldn’t access Sirte Airport, which belongs
to Libya and is on Libyan soil, because of the foreign forces present there,”
Dbeibeh said.
He added that the forces stationed
in the area asked them to enter Sirte by road, “but the government refused.”
Notably, Dbeibeh postponed a visit
to the country’s east that had been planned for April 26 to demonstrate his
government’s progress in ending years of division between warring factions.