Since Libya’s longtime dictator Col. Muammar Gaddafi was killed by rebel forces in 2011, the country he departed so brutally at the hands of his enemies has endured a cyclical civil war punctured by periods fragile stability.
Warlord Khalifa Haftar, whose power base is in the country’s east, launched a war in 2014-15 against the capital Tripoli in the country’s west, which ended with the Libya Political Agreement.
When that broke down in 2019-20, Haftar—armed with weapons and money from Russia, Egypt, and some Gulf states—attacked Libya’s west again, this time halted by a Turkish military intervention on the side of Tripoli.
The Libya Political Dialogue Forum (LDPF) sought a general election in December 2021. This is approaching three years’ delay. In the meantime, the country has been ‘managed’ by a conglomerate of elites with no incentive to yield power.
Central bank siege
The struggle over the fate of Libya is currently being played out in Tripoli, with the country’s central bank at the centre.
On Sunday, the bank suspended operations, after its head of information technology (IT) was kidnapped from his house, while other senior executives were threatened. This followed a week in which armed men laid siege to the central bank’s headquarters.
The kidnappers, backed by Government of National Unity (GNU) Prime Minister Abdel-Hamid Bebeiba, want the resignation of the bank’s powerful governor, Sadiq al-Kabir, who has been in the role since 2012. Since then, he has used Libya’s oil receipts to build up a sizeable surplus that plenty would like to get their hands on.
Read more: Sadiq al-Kabir: Libya’s increasingly dominant central banker
Obtaining his coveted position has long been the goal of Libya’s illegitimate institutions. Libya’s House of Representatives still consists of members last elected in 2004. It is now fighting for control with the Western-based GNU, created in 2021 for a one-year term.
Aguilla Saleh, the powerful House speaker, was elected with fewer than 1,000 votes, while GNU prime minister Abdel-Hamid Debeiba, elected by 39 members in questionable circumstances, should have stood down two years ago.
Even more institutions claim degrees of authority, including the Presidential Council (created as part of the LPDF) and the High State Council.
The threat of Haftar
In the plethora of fora and initiatives—some of which are sponsored by the UN—nothing gives credence to the idea that Libya is being governed. Underpinning this political stasis is the perennial threat of war from the Russian-backed Haftar
His 2019-20 assault was conducted with Russian mercenaries and weaponry, including snipers, drones, and anti-aircraft systems.