18-04-2024 07:02 AM Jerusalem Timing

Rival PM: New Elections Can Save Libya

Rival PM: New Elections Can Save Libya

The head of Libya’s self-declared government, Omar al-Hassi, has called in an interview with AFP for new elections to pull the violence-wracked nation back from chaos.

The head of Libya's self-declared government, Omar al-Hassi, has called in an interview with AFP for new elections to pull the violence-wracked nation back from chaos.
  
Hassi's administration is jostling for power with the internationally backed government of Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thani, formed after a parliamentary election in June.
  
That government and parliament have taken refuge in the far eastern city of Tobruk since Islamist militias led by the powerful Fajr Libya (Libya Dawn) coalition overran the capital in August. "We need new elections," Hassi told AFP, charging that the Tobruk-based parliament has "lost its legitimacy". "This parliament is no longer accepted in Libya. It has lost its legitimacy. We need new elections," the 55-year-old academic said.
  
"The poll must take place under the supervision of (elected) local councils." Hassi, who presents himself as an independent, says the unrest in Libya pitted "enemies of the revolution" against "revolutionaries". "The revolution has been stolen. We are in the process of getting it back again," he said.
  
Hassi insisted that his administration can restore stability. "We have managed this in Tripoli. Since Fajr Libya took control of the capital, we have ended power cuts and fuel shortages and arrested dozens of criminals," he said. "If we can do this in a city of over two million people, we can succeed in the whole country. "We urge the support of the international community in restoring stability. We are reaching out to them and trying to establish contacts with several countries," Hassi said.
  
He also called for foreign companies and diplomats evacuated in the summer because of the violence in Tripoli to return.

Three years after veteran dictator Moamer Gaddafi was toppled and killed in a NATO-backed uprising, the oil-rich North African country has two rival governments and a host of armed militias sparring for influence.