SKHIRAT, MOROCCO // Rival Libyan politicians signed on Thursday a deal on a unity government despite opposition on both sides, in what the United Nations described as a “first step” towards ending the crisis.
World powers have urged the warring factions to break a political deadlock that has allowed militants and people-smugglers to flourish since the fall of leader Muammar Qaddafi in 2011.
A group of lawmakers from Libya’s rival parliaments, as well as other political figures, inked the UN-sponsored accord in the Moroccan resort of Skhirat.
The document was signed by Emhemed Shoaib, the deputy speaker of the internationally recognised Libyan parliament, and Salah Al Makhzoum, the second deputy of the rival parliament based in the capital, Tripoli.
Mr Al Makhzoum said while the deal is not perfect, it’s a step to rescue Libya from collapsing and to ensure its unity.
Before the start of Thursday’s ceremony, Mr Al Makhzoum and Faraj Abu Hashem, the spokesman for the east-based parliament, said that 88 lawmakers from the two parliaments were present at the signing.
The eastern parliament has 156 known members, while the rival parliament in Tripoli has 135.
The foreign ministers of Turkey, Italy, Spain, Qatar, Tunisia, and Morocco also spoke at the ceremony in support of the deal.
But even within the two legislatures the deal has caused deep divisions.
The heads of both parliaments have warned that the agreement has no legitimacy and the politicians signing the agreement represented only themselves.
UN envoy Martin Kobler acknowledged that much remained to be done to end the turmoil.
“This is just the beginning of a long journey for Libya. Signing is only the first step on the road to putting Libya back on the right track,” he said at the ceremony.
“The door is always open to those who are not here today. The new government must move urgently to address the concerns of those who feel marginalised.”
The signing follows a gathering in Rome of a US- and Italian-led group of world powers and regional players that called on the two sides Sunday to lay down their arms and back a new unity government.
Nouri Abusahmein, who heads the militia-backed General National Congress (GNC) in Tripoli that is not recognised by the international community, said Wednesday that the signatories did not represent the parliaments.
“Whoever has not been commissioned by the GNC to sign or initial a deal on its behalf is, and will remain, without legitimacy,” he said before the legislature in the capital.
A government such as that proposed by the United Nations “is not the subject of consensus and does not even guarantee the minimum required to ensure its effectiveness”, he added.
On Tuesday in Malta, Mr Abusahmein met Aguila Saleh who heads the internationally recognised parliament based in Tobruk in the east near the border with Egypt.
It was the first time they had met since the rival administrations were formed in 2014.
At a joint news conference, both men said that those who sign the agreement represent only themselves.
Among the first to welcome the deal was French foreign minister Laurent Fabius, who praised the accord and promised to support efforts by a new unity government.
“The priority should now go toward creating a national unity government,” he said in a statement. “That’s the condition for tackling terrorism and trafficking that threaten the security of the region and Europe.”
* Agence France-Presse, Bloomberg News
