Libyan presidential candidate: Two main problems in our crisis are loose weapons and foreign interference
- Europe and Arabs
- Wednesday , 18 September 2024 7:14 AM GMT
Cairo: Youm7
Libyan presidential candidate, Engineer Mohamed Al-Mazoughi, confirmed that the Libyan political scene is very difficult and there is nothing impossible in it because there are several factors that make it possible to create a solution in Libya, the most important of which is the unity of the Libyan people and the absence of any problems between all members of the Libyan people at all.
Al-Mazoughi indicated in statements to "Youm7" and published on its website that there is no ethnic conflict in Libya that could fuel the conflict and that all of Libya is one race and even the Amazigh minorities are Libyans and live in harmony and enjoy their full rights, stressing that there are no political forces in Libya that can move the street and create strikes, noting that the two main problems in exacerbating the situation are loose weapons and foreign intervention to support certain armed groups and also political groups.
Adding: In Libya, as difficult as the scene is, it is not impossible to create a solution once weapons are tamed and a popular incubator is created that can support the Libyan government.
Regarding the reason for the political process in Libya faltering during the past months, he explained that there is no real national will among the parties to the conflict, and they are always negotiating to share power, and the international community is not serious about finding a solution. Regarding the party responsible for aborting the electoral process in Libya, he pointed out that despite the widening circle of accusations among the Libyan parties regarding the disruption or failure of the presidential and parliamentary elections, the most important of them revolve around the following points: the extent of the lack of consensus regarding the legal basis for the elections, a conflict of interests between stakeholders and those involved in Libyan political affairs locally and internationally, some loopholes in the mediation of the United Nations, as well as the High National Elections Commission for not applying the standards and conditions to everyone and accepting the candidacy of parties that do not meet the candidacy conditions. He explained that the crisis of the Central Bank of Libya may push Libya into a violent conflict over the revenues of selling oil wealth, and the division of the country and the fragmentation of unity with the presence of two governments and two central banks and the possibility of producing and exporting oil from both sides, stressing that the crisis of the Central Bank of Libya remains the largest and worst if quick and urgent measures are not taken to resolve the crisis in the coming days, warning of widespread disruptions to Libya's oil production as the Central Bank has become paralyzed due to following the policy of the brink of the abyss, and if the crisis of the Central Bank continues, this will lead to major consequences that may lead Libya to a revolution of the hungry that burns everything green and dry as a result of the depletion of food stocks and the scarcity of liquidity, pointing out that Libya is a consumer country and all food and other materials are imported under financial credits through the Central Bank and the food stock in Libya will not last long and will run out soon. He stressed that the presidential and legislative elections are not considered the solution to all of Libya's problems, as a result of the great political and intellectual desertification, but rather the first step to creating a solution, restoring the country and creating stability, explaining that their success requires security guarantees to avoid violence during and after the elections. As well as a comprehensive political consensus between all concerned parties with the necessity of forming a single mini-crisis government for the entire country that prepares the situation and unifies Libyan institutions or works as a preparatory stage that reaches supervising the holding of elections later.
Regarding the party capable of expelling mercenaries, foreign fighters and foreign forces from Libya, Al-Mazoughi stressed that a single government decision in the entire country, i.e. a single government that enjoys international recognition and local consensus with all parties, can contain the concerns of each party, and work to issue the necessary decisions to reassure international parties by replacing the presence of mercenaries with economic interests that serve the interests of all, as well as the cooperation of the international community by pressuring the concerned parties to settle the conflict.
He pointed out the Libyan people's complete rejection of the presence of any military forces on Libyan soil, especially since the country does not need this as there is absolutely no hostility between the people in Libya from one end to the other, and the hostility is only between the political parties, noting that Libya needs collective efforts from all concerned parties to achieve stability.
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