Libyans lean liberal in landmark elections
Libyans vote in landmark electionEighty seats are allocated to political entities, while 120 are reserved for individual candidates, which means the NFA’s electoral victory does not automatically grant it a majority.
The results, though complete, are not yet final. Rivals have a 14-day period to file appeals, after which the results will be certified.
Libyans voted July 7 for the assembly that will appoint a transitional government and oversee the drafting of a constitution. About 3,500 candidates ran for the new parliament.
The assembly, which will take over from the National Transitional Council, will have 30 days from its first meeting to appoint a prime minister.
The NFA is led by Mahmoud Jibril, who was prime minister in the interim government that declared Libya a free nation after the 2011 revolt that toppled longtime ruler Moammar Gadhafi in October. The mercurial Gadhafi dismantled many of the civic institutions common to democratic states during his 42 years in power, leaving Libya struggling to emerge from his shadow.
While Gadhafi’s death ended much of the violence, unrest continues in parts of the country, particularly the south and the west, and the government has not been able to completely contain the militias that helped overthrow the former leader.
In an interview with CNN’s Christiane Amanpour last week, Jibril said that it is vital for Islamists, liberals and secularists to “sit around one table” and form a new government.
“I think the biggest challenge right now is to convince our potential partners, especially the Islamist forces, that now it’s time that we sit around one table and talk about one destiny that is in the interest of the Libyan people,” he said from Tripoli. “It has nothing to do with who prevails in those elections or those who do not prevail.”
Jibril said the absence of a civic structure in Libya means people of all political ideologies can be part of a new government.
“It’s an opportunity that all parties, all political forces can have a new start where all of them can participate and take part in the reestablishment of the state,” he said.
The NFA is a coalition of 58 political parties that campaigned as a “more liberal, progressive option” and focused heavily on economic issues, according to the Project on Middle East Democracy, a U.S.-based group.
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