Parliament committee in charge of overseeing Friday’s presidential election concludes vote cannot be held on scheduled date.
A parliamentary committee tasked with overseeing Libya’s electoral process says it has become “impossible” to hold the country’s long-waited presidential election in two days, as scheduled.
“After consulting the technical, judicial and security reports, we inform you of the impossibility of holding the elections on the date of December 24, 2021, provided for by the electoral law,” the chairman of the committee wrote on Wednesday to the head of parliament, without giving a new date.
The letter came after the head of Libya’s High National Electoral Commission, in a document dated December 2020, ordered the dissolution of the electoral committees nationwide, without naming a final list of candidates, in a move that effectively postponed the first round of presidential polls due to take place on Friday.
Al Jazeera’s Malik Traina, reporting from Tripoli, said the committee’s letter was “just another sign” that the election will not proceed as planned, adding that the parliamentary body and the electoral commission have been disagreeing over who is responsible to definitively postpone the polls.
“What we might see is that come Friday, Libya will still have no official announcement of the delay,” he said. “It would just be a given that the polling stations will be closed, and that the elections aren’t happening, but nobody wants to take the political responsibility and say these elections can’t move ahead.
The widely expected delay after months of arduous preparations and international negotiations is a big blow to efforts to end 10 years of chaos in the country in the wake of a 2011 revolt that removed longtime ruler Muammar Gaddafi.
The election is part of a United Nations-backed plan aimed at restoring stability but without any clear agreement on rules, and with bitter disputes over the eligibility of the main candidates, the process has stalled and cannot go ahead.
On Tuesday, the UN’s mission in the country voiced concern about the security situation in Tripoli, after rival armed groups deployed in the south of the capital, closing roads using sandbags. Images posted online in the morning showed a tank and pick-up trucks mounted with machine guns in the Fornaj district.
“The current mobilization of forces affiliated with different groups creates tensions and increases the risk of clashes that could spiral into conflict,” the mission, known as UNSMIL said in a statement, adding that all disagreements regarding political matters should be resolved through dialogue.
Meanwhile, schools and the University of Tripoli closed on Tuesday as a precaution but there were no gun battles, residents said. In the afternoon, roads in Tripoli that had been closed were reopened and fewer gunmen were seen on the streets, according to reports.
Armed groups had also deployed in Tripoli’s streets last week after the unity government dismissed Abdulbasit Marwan, a senior military official backed by several of the capital’s powerful armed groups.
Backroom talks
Meanwhile early on Tuesday, two leading presidential candidates from western Libya, ex-Interior Minister Fathi Bashagha and former Deputy Prime Minister Ahmed Maiteeq, met Khalifa Haftar in Benghazi. Haftar is an eastern-based renegade military commander who is also seeking the presidency.
The content of their talks was not disclosed, but an adviser to Bashagha told the AFP news agency the reason for the visit was to “break down obstacles … and show that it is possible to unite”.
The meeting is the most prominent of several rounds of backroom talks over recent days between candidates, factions and foreign powers about delaying the vote and whether an interim government can meanwhile continue in power.
Those participating in the group meeting in Benghazi are aligned against the interim Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, who is another rival candidate.
Dbeibah had promised when he was appointed not to run for office. His opponents say he should not run in the election because he has been able to use state spending to attract votes.
Haftar’s candidacy is controversial in western areas after his 14-month assault on Tripoli from 2019-20, which destroyed much of the city. Another prominent candidate, Gaddafi’s son Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, is also unacceptable to many Libyans.
SOURCE: AL JAZEERA AND NEWS AGENCIES