Libya's
Presidential Council named a revised lineup late on Sunday for a unity
government under a United Nations-backed plan aimed at ending the
conflict in the North African state. One
of the council's members, Fathi al-Majbari, said in a televised
statement that the list of 13 ministers and five ministers of state had
been sent to Libya's eastern parliament for approval. But
in a sign of continuing divisions over how to bring together Libya's
warring factions, two of the council's nine members refused for a second
time to put their signatures to the proposed government, according to a
document posted on the Presidential Council's Facebook page. The
U.N. plan under which the unity government has been named was designed
to help Libya stabilize and tackle a growing threat from Islamic State
militants. It was signed in Morocco in December, but has been opposed by
hard-liners on both sides from the start and suffered repeated delays. "We
call on Libyans suffering from the fighting ... and the members of
parliament to support the Government of National Accord, which will
provide the framework to fight terrorism," Majbari said. Libya slid into
conflict soon after the uprising that toppled Muammar Gaddafi five years
ago. Since 2014, it has had two competing governments, one based in
Tripoli and the other in the east, both of which are backed by loose
alliances of armed brigades and former rebels. Islamic
State has taken advantage of a security vacuum to establish a foothold
in Libya, taking control of the city of Sirte and threatening to expand
from there. Western governments have urged Libyan factions to back the
unity government so that it can start taking on the threat and call in
international support where needed. Last
month the eastern parliament, which has been recognized
internationally, rejected an initial proposal for a unity government
amid complaints that, at 32, the number of ministers nominated was too
high. There have also been divisions over the distribution of posts and the future control of Libya's armed forces. Prime
Minister-designate Fayez Seraj, who also heads the Presidential
Council, told reporters on Sunday that the latest appointments took into
account "experience, competence, geographical distribution, the
political spectrum and the components of Libyan society". Many of the names
on Sunday's list were different from last month's proposal, though the
nominee for the key post of defense minister, Mahdi al-Barghathi, was
unchanged. U.N. Libya envoy
Martin Kobler was quick to congratulate the council on announcing a new
cabinet. "The journey to peace and unity of the Libyan people has
finally started," he tweeted.
Libya's presidential council announces revised unity government
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