Policy

Libyan MP calls for ‘genuine national reconciliation’


The speaker of the Libyan parliament, Counselor Aguila Saleh Issa, demanded that Libyans surrender to each other to ensure the safety of the country.

This came in his speech through the “zoom” technique during the launch of the strategic vision of the national reconciliation project by the Libyan Presidential Council on Thursday in Tripoli.

Salah said: “We look forward at this historic stage to transcending differences and rejecting disputes and conflicts that have disrupted life, disrupted relations, prevented unity of positions and ranks, and lost capabilities”, he said, stressing that “everyone must give in to ensure the safety of the country”.

He added: “We look forward to achieving genuine national reconciliation that ensures security and security and develops the past of conflicts so we can move forward steadily towards a state of law and institutions, not excluding anyone, and with all rights and duties in accordance with a constitution that Libyans can accept”.

National reconciliation “will help bring harmony to the place of division, eradicate the scourge of conflict, stop bloodshed, return displaced people and displaced people to their villages between their families and relatives, and end the past of revolutions and fighting”, he said.

“Reconciliation is an essential pillar in building the country, ensuring its stability and revival”, he said. We have lessons and lessons for peoples who made their way through national reconciliation and closed the pages of injustice and tyranny.

Salah called on everyone to support “that noble goal by various means and through reparation, restoring harmony and peace, overcoming violence and tampering, and consolidating the meaning of brotherhood, equality and the values of tolerance”.

He concluded by saying: “Libya is not a place to bet or bargain, its people have made sacrifices for it, and we should sacrifice to preserve and protect it, and make concessions between ourselves in order to ensure its safety and renaissance”.

On Saturday, Abdullah Al-Lafi, Vice-President of the Libyan Presidential Council, invited Speaker of Parliament Counselor Aguila Salah to deliver a speech during the opening of the Libyan reconciliation project. During the visit, Al-Lafi visit Saleh a visit at his home in the city of Gubba in eastern Libya, where he briefed him on the proposal of the national reconciliation project.

In his opening speech today, President of the Presidential Council Mohamed al-Menfi said his country “needs national efforts to graduate it from the circle of foreign intervention and dependency”, clarifying that “this can only be achieved through national reconciliation that upholds the interests of the nation over all interests”.

“Many peoples have suffered from division, secession and division, but with determination and will, they have triumphed”, al-Menfi said. With forgiveness, tolerance and reconciliation, they have stood and risen.

He continued: “We Libyans are no exception, we have had the time to forgive and reconcile, we have suffered a lot from the cruelty of displacement and the woes of division and disagreement and bitterness of loss. It is time for every Libyan and Libyan to live in tranquility and tranquility on the soil of the homeland, and we have to leave to future generations reasons that make them feel proud and proud to belong to this land, as did our great grandfathers”.

On the draft announced today, the Libyan President said: “Through this vision, we are determined to spare our people the scourge of war and the resulting loss, suffering, displacement, displacement and deprivation, and this can only be achieved by enforcing the law, achieving justice, upholding the rights and dignity of citizens and safeguarding their freedoms”.

“The start of the national reconciliation project has been completed”, he said.

“True reconciliation does not end with the signing of a project or agreement, but rather is an ongoing national project that addresses the mistakes of the past, protects society from falling into the clutches of conflict, and establishes the rule of law”, he said.

He continued: “The Presidential Council resolved from the very first moment to establish the right basis for the national reconciliation project, targeting a united country, a cohesive society and a strong state”.

He said his council “preferred to work away from the spotlight to establish the reconciliation project by employing a number of experts in various fields, in addition to the participation of those with ideas and initiatives in addressing the various aspects of the project”.

On June 9, the Libyan Presidential Council announced the imminent launch of the Comprehensive National Reconciliation Project, the first task for which it was assigned from the Political Dialog Forum.

The launch of a national reconciliation project in Libya and the formation of a High National Commission is one of the most important tasks mandated by the Libyan Presidential Council by the Libyan Political Dialog Forum held in Geneva between the parties to the Libyan conflict, sponsored by the UN and resulting in the establishment of the Presidential Council as a Libyan authority on February 5, 2021.

On April 5, 2012, the Presidential Council officially announced the inauguration of a High Commission for Libyan National Reconciliation, but that project has yet to be implemented.

Libya is currently witnessing several crises, including a political crisis that recently intensified after Prime Minister of National Unity Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh insisted on not complying with the decision of the country’s parliament, which relieved him of his post and appointed Fathi Bashagha as the head of a new government.

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