Libya Parliament to Vote on Interim PM’s New Cabinet
Story Code : 920438
Libya descended into chaos after dictator Moamer Kadhafi was toppled and killed in a 2011 NATO-backed uprising that has seen rival forces vying for power in the oil-rich North African country.
A UN-supervised process aims to unite the country after a ceasefire reached last October between two rival administrations, each backed by foreign forces, based in the east and west of the country.
The 188-strong House of Representatives was meeting in the coastal city of Sirte, the hometown of Kadhafi, located halfway between Tripoli, where the UN-recognized government is based, and the east, seat of a rival administration.
Prime minister-designate Abdul Hamid Dbeibah was elected in February at a UN-sponsored dialogue attended by a cross section of Libyans to steer the country toward the scheduled December 24 polls.
His interim government faces the daunting challenge of addressing the grievances of Libyans, from a dire economic crisis and soaring unemployment to crippling inflation and retched public services.
Dbeibah, a billionaire businessman, submitted his 33-member cabinet line-up to parliament for approval last week, without publicly revealing any names.
If approved, it would replace the Tripoli-based Government of National Accord [GNA] headed by Fayez al-Sarraj, and the eastern-based administration backed by strongman Khalifa Haftar.
An interim three-member presidency council, selected alongside prime minister Dbeibah last month, is to head the new unity administration.
If deputies fail to endorse the government on Monday, a new vote must take place, and Dbeibah has until March 19 to win approval for his cabinet.
But hurdles have emerged in the run-up to the vote, including allegations of vote-buying during the process to elect Dbeibah.
They center on claims in a confidential report by UN experts that at least three participants were offered bribes of hundreds of thousands of dollars in November.