Najla Mangoush Libyas ruling council suspends foreign minister
Libyaâs transitional government rejects the councilâs decision, raising tensions ahead of planned elections.
Libyaâs ruling presidential council has suspended Foreign Minister Najla Mangoush for âadministrative violationsâ and barred her from traveling.
A spokeswoman for the council said the three-member body suspended Mangoush on Saturday for carrying out foreign policy without coordination with the council.
The spokeswoman did not provide additional details.
There was no immediate comment from the foreign minister, but Libyaâs transitional Government of National Unity rejected the councilâs decision in a statement early on Sunday.
The statement, issued on the governmentâs Facebook page, lauded the ministerâs efforts, saying she would carry her duties normally.
It also said that the presidential council has âno legal right to appoint or cancel the appointment of members of the executive authority, suspend them or investigate themâ.
It added that these powers are exclusive to the prime minister.
Elections, Lockerbie bombingThe infighting in Tripoli comes more than six weeks before planned elections, and a few days ahead of an international conference in the French capital to push for holding presidential and parliamentary elections as scheduled on December 24.
Vice President of the United States Kamala Harris is to join French President Emmanuel Macron and other world leaders at the Paris conference on November 12.
[embedded content]
Libya expert Emadeddin Badi linked Mangoushâs suspension to comments she made about the 1988 Lockerbie bombing in a BBC interview this week.
During the interview, Badi said Mangoush had âhinted at a potential extraditionâ of the man wanted over the plane bombing â" Abu Agila Mohammed Masud â" saying that âpositive outcomes are comingâ in his case.
The US alleges that Masud, a former member of Libyaâs intelligence services, assembled and programmed the bomb that blew up Pan Am Flight 103 over the Scottish town of Lockerbie in 1988, killing 270 people.
Badi, an analyst at the Geneva-based Global Initiative, said another factor in Mangoushâs suspension was the tensions between Libyan politicians over the elections.
âBehind the scenes, there are increasingly overt tensions between political players⦠that are catalysed by the impeding electoral deadline of the 24th of December,â he said.
Libya has been engulfed in chaos since a NATO-backed uprising toppled longtime leader Moammar Gaddafi in 2011. He was captured and killed by an armed group two months later.
The oil-rich country was for years split between rival governments, one based in the capital, Tripoli, and the other in the eastern part of the country. Each side is backed by different foreign powers and militias.
The interim government now in charge was appointed in February after months of UN-backed negotiations to lead the country through elections. It includes the presidential council and a Cabinet of ministers that runs day-to-day affairs.
Disagreement over the councilâs suspension of the foreign minister is likely to increase tensions between Libyaâs rival factions as they try to work together after years of conflict.
0 Response to "Najla Mangoush Libyas ruling council suspends foreign minister"
Post a Comment