To escape no-confidence vote: Libyan PM accuses neighboring countries of exporting terrorism to his country
Libyan Prime Minister Abdulhamid
al-Dabaiba seeks to avoid pressure from the Libyan parliament to withdraw
confidence from the unity government he leads by escalating with Libya’s
neighboring countries, specifically Tunisia, against the background of closing
the borders due to Tunisian fears of infiltration by terrorist elements and
carrying out operations targeting Tunisia’s security, as he accused it of
exporting terrorism after the entry of 10,000 terrorists to Libya who came
mainly from neighboring countries.
Border closures
On Sunday, August 22, Dabaiba
announced the complete closure of the Ras Ajdir and Dehiba-Wazen border
crossings despite the Libyan authorities' efforts to open them, and the
security authorities justified their position by the health measures taken to
prevent the spread of the corona virus.
Exporting
terrorism
Dabaiba confirmed the entry of 10,000
terrorists into Libya who came mainly from neighboring countries, in reference
to Tunisia, adding that the number of Libyans among them can be counted on the
fingers of one hand.
Addressing the Tunisian authorities,
Dabaiba said, “If Tunisia wants to build real and honest relations with us, the
neighboring countries must be respected. We have become clever about
international games, and we cannot accept the repetition of previous scenes. We
cannot accept that the Libyans are laughed at again.”
In a speech addressed to the Libyans
on Friday evening, August 27, Dabaiba denounced the accusation of terrorism in
his country, noting that terrorism was coming to Libya from abroad and that he
had sent a delegation to Tunisia to clarify the Libyan position and to reach an
understanding with the Tunisian government regarding this strange accusation.
Dabaiba's statements come in response
to reports published by Tunisian and Libyan media in which Tunisia said that
hundreds of extremist elements in Libya were preparing to enter Tunisia to
carry out acts of chaos and terrorist plots, which were later denied by
Tunisian Foreign Minister Othman Jerandi, who confirmed that the decision to
close Tunisia's borders with Libya was motivated by health, not security.
Observers believe that the escalation
that occurred during Dabaiba's speech against its western neighbor Tunisia and
the accusation of exporting terrorism was an attempt to escape from internal pressures
with a social, health and financial dimension, pressures resulting from the
government's failure to deliver the promises made by Dabaiba. They pointed out
that the escalation with Tunisia was an attempt to bully the Libyan parliament,
which refuses to ratify the budget and threatens to withhold its confidence in
the government, as reflected in the statements of Parliament Speaker Aguila
Saleh.
Obstructing
Libyan state
On the other hand, Dabaiba attacked
the parliament and accused it of obstructing the work of the state by refusing
to ratify the budget. He said that the parliament's reasons for not approving
his repeated budget proposals are “unreal and flimsy,” blaming the parliament
for obstructing the elections scheduled for December.
A growing squabble over the budget has
emerged as a key element among rival political factions, undermining the
UN-backed process seen as the best chance for peace in years.
Amid the deepening political
stalemate, many Libyans fear that the process that succeeded in forming a
unified government for the first time in years could lose momentum.
Dabaiba explained that the election
problem is not logistical, but rather a purely legislative problem, noting that
his government has presented a program to facilitate and implement the
electoral process, in which failure to hold the elections will end the
political process and explode the conflict that has devastated vast swathes of
Libyan cities, which has attracted major external powers and given foreign
mercenaries a foothold along the front lines.
It is noteworthy that the Libyan
parliament decided last week to summon the Government of National Unity (GNU)
led by Dabaiba to appear before it during an interrogation session to be held
in Tobruk after the growing state of discontent about the government's
performance and the emergence of parliamentary calls for the withdrawal of
confidence from it, as 11 Libyan MPs demanded withdrawing confidence from the
GNU because of what they called its continued waste of public money and failure
to implement its pledges to improve services, as well as exceeding its powers
and its interference in the military field.