Bathily's initiative for Libya … Mediation or guardianship?
The briefing given by Abdoulaye Bathily, head of the UN Support Mission in Libya, to the UN Security Council has brought renewed controversy to the Libyan scene.
Bathily said he would form a high-level
steering committee to adopt a legal framework and a binding timetable for
holding elections in Libya in 2023.
Guardianship or mediation
The UN envoy did not provide details about his
initiative, but he promised to form a high-level steering committee in an
attempt to end an impasse that began a year ago and threatens to renew the
conflict in Libya.
Nevertheless, observers say his proposal may open
the door for guardianship, not mediation, on Libya on the road to ending the
internal crisis in the country.
This may be one reason why the Libyan House of
Representatives and Prime Minister Fathi Bashagha rejected Bathily's proposal.
The UN envoy's briefing included fallacies
regarding the failure of the Houses of Representatives and the State Council to
approve the constitutional rule, the House of Representatives said in a
statement.
It said the proposal stood in contradiction with
paragraphs in the same briefing that acknowledged the issuance of the
constitutional amendment, which was carried out in consultation with the State Council.
Welcome
Immediately after Bathily made his
briefing to the UN Security Council, the German ambassador to Libya welcomed it.
He underscored his country's support for the
efforts of the UN envoy to hold elections in Libya this year.
However, Libyan affairs specialist Mohamed Qeshout
accused the House of Representatives and the State Council of standing behind
the crisis in Libya.
"Bathily's briefing is motivated
by the American and Western desire to drag the Libyan people towards a
guardianship that reaches the enactment of laws to hold elections according to
their desire and not the desire of the Libyans," Qeshout told The
Reference.
Reshaping Libyan crisis
Ahmed Ulaibah, a researcher at Ahram Centre for Political
and Strategic Studies, confirms in a study titled 'Is the role of the UN
mission in Libya shifting from mediation to guardianship?' that Bathily's initiative reshapes
the Libyan crisis in another way, instead of solving it.
He points out that it is conceivable that pushing
the Libyan political process needs an initiative to save it.
"Nonetheless, saving any political process
requires a more active role for mediation and dialogue to bring the parties
closer," Ulaibah said.
"It seems that the UN envoy was conducting
dialogues with various parties in the framework of listening only, to decide
for himself later what to do without referring to those parties," he added.
He noted that this confirms the hypothesis of
guardianship.