Home World In Libya Words Are Proving To Be Mightier Than Actions; UNSC Flags Concerns.
World - 1 hour ago

In Libya Words Are Proving To Be Mightier Than Actions; UNSC Flags Concerns.

Rome; June 2026: Libya has been mired in political dysfunction since the collapse of Muammar Gaddafi’s regime in 2011, which shattered State institutions and triggered recurring struggles over legitimacy and power.

The country’s current stalemate pits the United Nations recognised Government of National Unity in the capital Tripoli against eastern-based authorities backed by the House of Representatives and General Haftar’s Libyan National Army, a split that deepened after planned elections in December 2021 were postponed indefinitely.

Briefing the Security Council yesterday late evening (IST) Thursday, 18th June – Hanna Tetteh, the Secretary-General’s Special Representative for Libya and head of the UN Support Mission (UNSMIL), said the political process had regained momentum, though progress remained fragile.

She described the UNSMIL-facilitated road map encompassing elections, institutional unification, security, economic reform and national reconciliation, as ‘not merely a political imperative’ but ‘a viable path’ out of the country’s institutional paralysis. Hanna Tetteh has asserted that a 06 months ‘structured dialogue’ engaging around 120 Libyans from diverse backgrounds has produced nearly 600 recommendations across governance, security, the economy and human rights, while further adding that the report has been broadly accepted, and the task remains in implementing the same into a structured, Libyan-led accomplishment.

At the same time, UNSMIL has been facilitating direct talks between the Government of National Unity and LNA General Command, with both rival parliamentary chambers also participating. Discussions has been constructive, with agreement in principle on reconstituting the electoral commission, and negotiations underway on electoral laws.

Hanna Tetteh reiterated that: “The Libyan judiciary remains divided into parallel supreme judicial councils and constitutional bodies, as I have previously reported. Unfortunately, no agreement has yet been reached to end these divisions. This leads to conflicting rulings, unilateral decisions, and, at times, chaos, threatening the emergence of parallel legal systems. It also undermines public confidence in the rule of law and could impact electoral processes”, while further stating that, “the Libyan mediation committee’s proposal to restructure the Supreme Judicial Council has been widely accepted. I urge Libyan leaders to expedite their efforts to resolve this crucial issue and the question of constitutional bodies in order to achieve national unity and to bolster confidence in the judiciary’s integrity, consistency, and impartiality, both within Libya and abroad”.

However, while presenting, Hanna Tetteh was candid about the risks. “Libya now has a clearer set of political options with a narrowing window in which to act”, she told the Council, stressing that responsibility lay first and foremost with Libyan stakeholders. She has warned that if the road map failed to advance, she would return to the Council with alternative proposals drawing on existing political agreements.

Security remains a concern. Disinformation about alleged UN plans to resettle migrants in Libya has fuelled violence against UN premises, including clashes in Zawiya and protests outside the UNHCR and UNSMIL offices in Tripoli. “The direction is known, the tools exist. What is required now is the political will to deliver”.

The members of the UN Security Council have broadly welcomed the progress while urging more.

France said developments in the security and economic arenas were moving in the right direction but that greater efforts were needed to guarantee unity and stability.

Russia cautioned that any settlement must be fully Libyan-led and warned that proposals failing to secure the buy-in of key leaders risked deeper destabilisation.

Libya’s own representative expressed reservations about the Structured Dialogue, saying its final report should have reflected a fuller range of views. He stressed that any political process must end the transitional period, respect Libyan sovereignty and avoid repeating past mistakes, and declared that Libya would never be a country for the resettlement of migrants in any form.

Team Maverick.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Check Also

US Ends Maritime Blockade Around Iranian Ports Following New Agreement with Tehran

Washington, June 2026 : The United States has officially lifted its blockade on maritime t…