Audio By Carbonatix
An interim government allied with Libya's eastern-based renegade commander Khalifa Haftar has resigned amid protests over power cuts and deteriorating living conditions.
Ezzel-Deen al-Falih, a spokesman for the Tobruk-based House of Representatives (HoR), said Prime Minister Abdallah al-Thani tendered the government's resignation to Speaker Aguila Saleh late on Sunday.
Parliamentary spokesman Abdallah Abaihig said HoR lawmakers would review the resignation of al-Thani's government, which is not internationally recognised, in their next meeting. No date has been set for the session.
Oil-rich Libya was plunged into chaos when a NATO-backed uprising in 2011 toppled longtime ruler Moammar Gaddafi, who was later killed. The country has since split between rival east- and west-based administrations, each backed by armed groups and foreign governments.
A 14-month offensive by Haftar's forces to wrest control of the capital, Tripoli, from the internationally recognised Government of National Accord (GNA) crumbled in June, with the front lines now solidified near the central city of Sirte.
The HoR on Friday accused the Central Bank and the GNA of "plundering" the country and neglecting the east, in apparent efforts to deflect blame for the deterioration of public services.
In recent days, hundreds of people have taken to the streets of Benghazi and other eastern cities to protest against crippling electricity shortages and poor living conditions, setting tyres ablaze and blocking traffic on several major roads.
On Saturday, protests also erupted in al-Marj, a Haftar stronghold.
In a statement, the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) said at least one civilian had reportedly been killed and three others wounded in al-Marj. It called for "a thorough and immediate" investigation into "the reported excessive use of force against peaceful demonstrations" and the speedy release of a number of detained protesters.
UNSMIL statement on the protests in al-Marj city on 12 September 2020https://t.co/aKPQLnOgeP pic.twitter.com/SUkM3LNHOd
— UNSMIL (@UNSMILibya) September 13, 2020
The demonstrations in eastern Libya mirror similar protests in recent weeks over power cuts and corruption in Tripoli and other western cities.
UNSMIL said the protests across Libya were "motivated by deep-seated frustrations about sustained poor living conditions, shortages of electricity and water, rampant corruption, misgovernance, and a lack of service provision throughout the country".
The UN mission said the protests underscore "the urgent need to lift the oil blockade" and the return to a "full and inclusive" political process to end Libya's years-long conflict.
Powerful tribes in eastern Libya loyal to Haftar closed oil export terminals and choked off major pipelines at the start of the year to pressure the GNA.
The US Embassy in Libya said Haftar agreed to reopen oil fields and terminals no later than Saturday. By Sunday evening, it was not clear whether the blockade had been lifted.
Latest Stories
-
Labubu toy manufacturer exploited workers, labour group claims
7 seconds -
Lawerh Foundation, AyaPrep to introduce Dangme-language maths module
30 minutes -
US forces seize a sixth Venezuela-linked oil tanker in Caribbean Sea
40 minutes -
Votes being counted in Uganda election as opposition alleges rigging
46 minutes -
Ntim Fordjour accuses government of deliberate LGBT push in schools
47 minutes -
National security task force storms ‘trotro’ terminals to halt illegal fare hikes
50 minutes -
U.S. visa restriction development for Ghana concerning – Samuel Jinapor
51 minutes -
Uganda election chief says he has had threats over results declaration
57 minutes -
Quality control lapses allowed LGBT content into teachers’ manual – IFEST
58 minutes -
Akufo-Addo’s name will be “written in gold” in Ghana’s history in the fullness of time – Jinapor
60 minutes -
Tread cautiously about financial hedging – US-based Associate Professor to BoG
1 hour -
LGBTQ curriculum row: Quality control failure, not timing, caused teacher manual controversy – Dr Anti-Partey
1 hour -
Banks wrote-off GH¢1.39bn as bad debt in 10-months of 2025
1 hour -
I cannot rate the lands minister’s performance, but… – Abu Jinapor
1 hour -
Accra’s traffic to blame for public transport crisis—GPRTU
1 hour
