Saturday, June 30, 2012

Libya Election Primer - yes there will be an election on July 7, 2012 to select the National Conference - of the 130 parties standing for election , what do they " stand " for , who is running , whom should libyan voters consider ? Here is a good election primer ! News items from forgotten Libya !


http://www.libyaherald.com/elections-analysis-so-who-are-they-and-what-do-they-stand-for/

Elections Analysis: So who are they and what do they actually stand for?

By George Grant.
Tripoli, 30 June: 
3,708 candidates are standing for election in individual seats and for political parties
If Libyans are feeling a little confused about the imminent National Conference elections, then they aren’t alone. Rarely has anyone been confronted with what appears to be so much choice, and yet at the same time so little – and with such paucity of information.
Fully 130 political parties are standing for election on 7 July, putting forward no fewer than 1,207 candidates between them. And that’s just for the first 80 seats up for grabs in the National Conference. Even more of an enigma are the 2,501 candidates running as individuals for the remaining 120 seats. Obviously, these individuals are not standing for election everywhere, but even when you break them down into their 73 constituencies, that still leaves Libyans with an average of 34 candidates each to choose from.
The Political Parties
Amongst the political parties, four main groups have emerged as the punters’ favourites, and the Libya Herald will be providing a profile of each in the coming days.
First is the Justice & Construction Party (Hizb Al-Adala wa Al-Bina), the political arm of the Muslim Brotherhood in Libya, which is fielding 73 candidates. The party is led by Mohammed Sawan, a Misratan and former political prisoner under Qaddafi. Arguably the most organised of the parties, Justice & Construction’s banner of a rearing brown horse set against a sunny blue sky now appears everywhere around the capital Tripoli. Many of their members are highly educated and well connected, and they will be hoping to receive a boost from the victory of the Brotherhood’s candidate Mohammed Mursi in the Egyptian presidential elections on 24 June.
Then comes the Nation Party (Hizb Al-Wattan), founded by the leading Islamist cleric Ali Salabi along with the former emir of the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group (LIFG) and head of the Tripoli Military Council, Abdul Hakim Belhaj. The party is fielding 59 candidates, and its purple-tinged banners are perhaps equally as ubiquitous as Justice & Construction’s. The party is believed to be popular with former revolutionary fighters, and has been described as something of a ‘working man’s’ party in terms of its popular appeal.
Third is the National Forces Alliance (Tahaluf Al-Quwah Al-Wataniya) a coalition of anywhere between 20 and more than 40 political parties supervised by Mahmoud Jibril, who served as interim prime minister under the NTC during the revolution and as head of the National Economic Development Board (NEDB) under Qaddafi before that. The party has commonly been described as towards the ‘liberal’ end of the political spectrum, and it counts large numbers of Libya’s extensive overseas diaspora amongst its members. The National Forces Alliance is collectively fielding 70 candidates.
Finally, there is the National Front Party (Hizb Al-Jabha Al-Wataniya), led by Mohammed Magaraif, which is putting up 45 candidates for election. Prior to 9 May, the party was known as the National Front for the Salvation of Libya (NFSL), and it distinguishes itself as having led a consistent opposition campaign against Qaddafi since its inception in 1981, albeit mostly from overseas. The party hopes that this continuity of presence and its credibility as a long-established pro-democratic and anti-Qaddafi force in Libya will help it in the elections.
Other big parties, at least in terms of the number of candidates they have standing, include the Union for Homeland (Al-Ittihad min Ajl Al-Wattan), a Misrata-based party led by the long-time anti-Qaddafi dissident Abdel Rahman Al-Suwayhili (60 candidates); the National Centrist Party(Hizb Al-Ummah Al-Wasat), sometimes described as the “political wing of the LIFG” and counting amongst its number the prominent LIFG member Sami Mustafa Al-Saadi (43 candidates); and the Party of National Development and Welfare (Hizb Al-Watani Liltanmia wa Al-Reaya Al-Egtemaya) with 50 candidates.
Islamism vs Secularism – a false dichotomy
What tends to distinguish these parties is not so much their diversity as how little difference there seems to be between them, at least in terms of their public declarations. Although there may be some merit in attempting to place these parties along a ‘liberal-to-pious’ political spectrum, the division between Secularists and Islamists so beloved by outsiders looking into Libya is a false one. Jibril’s National Forces Alliance is a case in point. At the coalition’s launch, prominence of place was given to a leading Sheikh from Zintan, whilst proceedings were introduced by a woman in high-heels, a ‘hijab-chic’ and a skintight black catsuit.
Ali Salabi has previously denounced Jibril and his followers as “extreme secularists”, although Jibril has repeatedly denied this. Salabi, for his part, has been denounced variously as an Islamist extremist and a Qatari stooge, labels he isn’t happy with either.
In fact, it is very difficult to find a Libyan, either within the parties or on the street, who would describe himself as secularist, with an overwhelming majority insisting that Islam must play an important role in political life, meaning that Sharia forms the basis of the law. At the same time, however, few seem to believe that this aspiration is incompatible with a multi-party democratic society in which women can work and vote, freedom of speech is respected and international human rights covenants are honoured. Certainly, there are radicals on either end of the spectrum, but for the most part it is a matter of degrees.
Views on Women
You won’t find many many Libyans who’ll argue that women shouldn’t have the right to work and vote, and the same is true of the political parties. Indeed, if any of the parties did have serious principled objections to women having a role in political life, they’d have trouble standing in these elections at all, because the law requires them to field as good as 50 per cent female candidates.
Ironically, this makes it rather harder to ascertain where the parties stand on womens’ rights generally; a good indicator would certainly have been the number of female candidates each had standing if the quota had not been in place. One thing is for sure, however, there aren’t many women out campaigning for the Justice & Construction Party in catsuits.
The fact that there are just 84 women standing as individual candidates as against 2,417 men clearly demonstrates that Libya has some way to go before attaining full female equality, but that hardly distinguishes it from a great many other countries internationally. The consensus is that those women who did wish to stand chose overwhelmingly to concentrate their efforts where they have the greatest chance of success: the political parties.
Certainly, attitudes towards women are a far removed from those prevailing in places such as Saudi Arabia and some of the Gulf States, in the urban centres at least. It should not be forgotten that it was a woman, Najat Al-Kikhia, who received most votes in May’s Benghazi Local Council elections, winning by more than twice the margin of her nearest male rival.
Party ‘Manifestos’
At this early stage in Libya’s democratic life, it cannot be said that much nuance has been developed between the parties’ positions on issues such as healthcare, defence, foreign policy, education and the economy. All declare their wish to develop a strong and independent Libya, in which citizens have jobs, schools and hospitals are well run and the militia are either disbanded or incorporated into the national army and police. All very well, but – understandably enough perhaps – there doesn’t appear to be much of a strategy for how to reach that point as yet.
Certainly, divisions between what would be called Left wing and Right wing such as exist in more developed democracies have yet to emerge. What perhaps can be said is that this is a nation of aspiring free-marketeers, in which the desire to privatise many nationalised industries enjoys widespread support. The opposite of what existed under Qaddafi in other words.
On matters of foreign policy, circumstance will to a large extent demand pragmatism. Libya is a vast country with porous borders, a weak military and an underdeveloped infrastructure. Regardless of the fact that he is wanted by the International Criminal Court (ICC) on charges of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity, Sudan’s president Omar Al-Bashir is a regional neighbour, and will be worked with as such. The fact that he – out of long-running anti-Qaddafi sentiment – supported the revolution also helps.
What can be said is that Libya is a country now looking north to Europe and sideways to its Arab neighbours more than south to Africa, Qaddafi’s favoured stomping ground during the final years of his eccentric rule. Although Russia and China will have to be dealt with by virtue of their global size and strength, the latter especially, Libyans of all stripes have repeatedly made clear their desire to work with nations such as France, the United Kingdom and the United States, who played major roles in supporting them during last year’s revolution. Israel, both on account of historical reasons and because it is widely perceived as having opposed the Arab Spring uprisings, remains persona non grata.
In terms of favoured political systems, it is not clear whether Libyans will opt for a parliamentary or a presidential model when it comes to drawing up the permanent constitution after the 7 July elections, although opinion seems to be tilting towards the former, nor is it clear the extent to which power will be concentrated in the centre or in the regions. Much may depend on the balance of influence in the National Conference, which is why such a large number of people in the East are now voicing considerable disquiet ahead of the vote.
Eastern Libya and the ‘Federalist Question’
Currently, the road between Eastern and Western Libya remains blocked by the self-declared Cyrenaica Transitional Council (CTC), which they closed to military and much commercial traffic on 20 June. The CTC say they set up the blockade, which sits on the historic dividing line between Cyrenaica (East) and Tripolitania (West) Libya at Wadi Al-Ahmar, in protest at what they perceive to be the unjust distribution of seats for the National Conference. Currently, there are 60 seats reserved for the East as against 100 for the West, and 40 for the South.
This allocation was drawn up along demographic lines, but large numbers of Eastern Libyans fear this will leave them in a comparatively weak negotiating position when it comes to drawing up the constitution and deciding who gets what. Historically neglected under Qaddafi, Benghazi and other eastern towns do not want to suffer that fate a second time. The NTC argues that it adequately addressed these concerns with the Article 30 Amendment to the 3 August 2011 Constitutional Declaration.
This amendment stipulates that the actual committee tasked with drawing up the constitution will have equal representation from East, West and South, with each providing 20 delegates. The amendment also states that in addition to ratification by a simple majority in a nationwide referendum, ratification will also require a two-thirds plus one majority in the National Conference, meaning the East could still block it if they wished.
Most recently, the interim government has suggested that appointment to the constitution-writing committee could be decided by regional bloc votes within the National Conference to ensure each part of Libya got the representatives on the committee they wanted.
In spite of all this, many Easterners seem unplacated and there have been suggestions of an election boycott and even a Cyrenaica declaration of independence. The former outcome remains unlikely and the latter almost certainly won’t happen as things currently stand. The CTC have said that they favour Cyrenaica having its own flag, anthem and clearly delineated borders, but their leader, Brigadier-General Hamid Hassi, has made clear that the group does not advocate independence. It would also be wrong to use the CTC as a synonym for Eastern public opinion, with many and perhaps the majority opposing its federalist aspirations.
One of the problems with ascertaining who stands where on the federalism question is that it seems to mean different things to different people. When understood as effective independence, a clear majority of people oppose it, including in the East. When understood as autonomy with political and legal ramifications, it is still opposed, including by the big parties, but clearly less so in the East. When understood as decentralisation, however, the concept is given a positive reception all over Libya and major parties including the Justice & Construction Party, the Nation Party, the National Front and the National Forces Alliance have all said they support it.
The South
A desire for greater representation and attention, if not autonomy, also exists in Libya’s expansive South. Inevitably neglected by Qaddafi, many southern towns are in fact little more than desert hamlets, with minimal infrastructure and isolated from the rest of the country.
With smuggling representing such an important part of the South’s economy, whatever anybody says, control of these routes has also contributed to the balance of power as well as affiliations and conflict. It would be fair to say that successful elections in the south could alter the balance of power in many parts, meaning that any existing power brokers left on the wrong side of the fence will have a vested interest in seeing them fail. Nevertheless, attracting greater investment into the region will be a priority for almost everybody.
One significant factor to consider is the declared aspirations of the Tebu for the National Conference and the writing of Libya’s permanent constitution. The ethnically-black Tebu not infrequently come into conflict with their Arab neighbours, and much of the recent fighting around Kufra and Sebha has been between Tebu and certain Arab tribes, as well as latterly forces deployed by the transitional government.
At the official launch of the Tebu National Assembly (TNA) on 3 June, Tebu leaders chose not to emphasise their distinctive identity or their aspiration to be respected as a separate but equal group within the country, but rather their desire to work towards closer relations with Arabs and to be an integral part of the Libyan nation. Certainly, words count for less than deeds, but it is notable that either route would have sounded perfectly respectable in post-Qaddafi Libya. They argued that just as they had taken a leading role in opposing Qaddafi during the revolution, so they wished to play a full and active role in the National Conference and in developing the permanent constitution.
The Individual Candidates
Finally, what of the individual candidates themselves, who remain for the most part the great unknown in this election? Certainly, it would be safe to assume that the majority will reflect the concerns of those parts of Libya which they now seek to represent, but building up an overall picture is almost impossible by virtue of the sheer numbers involved and the short period of time they have had to establish their profiles. Many of them will be familiar faces to Libyans in the constituencies in which they are standing, but with official campaigning have only begun on 18 June, all the candidates have had less than three weeks to build a proper platform. As is the case with the political parties, there is also the added problem that all of the individual candidates remain to be tested.
This dearth of information about individual candidates is of course extremely ironic, given that they will actually form a majority within the National Conference, holding 120 seats between them to the political parties’ 80. One of the most important questions is therefore how many of these individuals are actually affiliated, albeit unofficially, with the parties, and where the remainder will go once the Conference is formed. It is widely assumed that most of the individual candidates favour one party or another, just like every other citizen, and some informed Libyan analysts believe the campaign slogans on the posters of individual candidates often belie their party political sympathies. As a prediction, it seems fairly safe to say that the majority of the individual candidates won’t stay independent for long once the National Conference is formed.
Conclusion
A cliché it may be, but the only certainty about this election is that nothing at all is certain. Libya is, to all intents and purposes, taking a plunge into the unknown and only the most self-assured of analysts would make hard and fast predictions about who emerges from the other side, and in what shape. What does seem more certain, however, is the near universal desire on the part of Libyans to see this transition to democracy succeed. This is not a country that looks to the Taliban as a model for government nor is it one that thrives on conflict. It is notable that the Warriors Affairs commission recently found that of the more-than 200,000 militia surveyed, 70 per cent favoured a return to civilian life, with the remaining 30 per cent declaring an aspiration to join either the regular army or police.
A mixture of factional infighting, inexperience and logistical shortcomings would be the most likely reasons for failure, much more so than dangerous and misguided ideologies. It’ll soon be up to the newly elected National Conference members, whoever they are, to work out in practice what those grandiose slogans of theirs actually mean.





http://www.libyaherald.com/libyan-diplomat-flees-bangladesh-in-alleged-13-million-visa-scam/

Libyan diplomat flees Bangladesh in alleged $13 million visa scam

By Rahman Jahangir.
Dhaka, 30 June:
A middle-ranking Libyan diplomat in Bangladesh is believed to have absconded with up to $13 million of visa payments made by Bangladeshis seeking jobs in Libya.
Kamel Al Mahjoub, who was chargé d’affaires at the embassy in Dhaka, is also thought to have operated a scam selling invalid visas. Up to 400 Bangladeshis have been turned away by Libyan immigration authorities in recent months, because of these fake documents.
ATN Bangla, a private Bangladeshi television channel which broke the story, reported that a high-level Libyan team was due to arrive in the Bangladeshi capital to investigate the fraud.
Mahjoub had been working unsupervised for over a year and Bangladesh authorities are blaming the scam on the lack of a Libyan ambassador. The previous mission head, Ahmed Atia Hamad Al-Iman, resigned from his post in protest against Qaddafi treatment of Libyan civilians, five days after the start of the revolution, and has not yet been replaced.
Frantic Bangladeshi workers at the Tunisian border last year. With acknowledgements to Reuters
A journalist for ATN Bangla, Mr Keramot Ullah Biplob, told Libya Herald that Mahjoub had been charging $500 per visa application but that when the visas were issued, many carried the same visa number, rendering them invalid. Ten thousand visas had actually been issued and a further six thousand stamped passports are currently waiting, undelivered, at the Libyan embassy. It is not clear if these travel documents also all carry the same number.
Biplob continued “Mahjoub does not appear to have left any money in Bangladeshi accounts but he apparently has a large sum in an international Dubai bank.” Mahjoub and his family reportedly left the country for Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia on 14 June.
The allegations have been supported by Dr. Zafar Ahmed Khan, secretary of Bangladesh’s Welfare and Overseas Employment Ministry, who added that he hoped the entire scam would be exposed when the new Libyan Ambassador arrived in Dhaka. There have been reports that local recruiting agencies may have been involved in the alleged racket.
Biplob said of the thousands of his countrymen waiting to return to jobs or seeking work in Libya for the first time: “ They are very good, very friendly, all Muslim, all hard workers.”
Around 30,000 Bangladeshis were working in Libya, but the majority fled the fighting early between February and April 2011.
It was not clear last night how the Libyan immigration authorities were going to handle the fraud and whether Bangladeshis who had paid foreign currency for visas in good faith, would be issued proper travel and work documents.
The Libyan Foreign Ministry spokesman, Saad Elshlmani, said last night that a team of investigators was about to leave for Dhaka to look into the allegations.

and...
http://www.libyaherald.com/egyptians-capture-biggest-ever-haul-of-smuggled-weaponry/

Egyptians capture biggest-ever haul of smuggled weaponry

by Hadi Fornaji
Tripoli, 29 June:
Egypt has hailed its biggest-ever arms find after its security forces today intercepted smugglers outside Mersah Matrouh, on the coastal road from Libya.
The haul of weapons seized today after a tip-off, was being carried in a truck and a car. It included 138 Grad rockets and around 7,000 rounds of ammunition, said Egypt’s interior minister General Mohammed Ibrahim, interviewed by AP.
When the vehicles were stopped a firefight broke out, during which a smuggler was killed, while others were captured. One of these reportedly told Egyptian investigators that the weapons had come from Sirte and were en route to Egypt’s Sinai peninsula and from there to the Gaza Strip. The Egyptians have not yet revealed how many smugglers were involved nor their nationality.

and....

Wanted Qaddafi loyalist seeks UK asylum

Tripoli, 29 June:
A Qaddafi loyalist, high on the government’s most wanted list, has asked the UK for political asylum.
Dr. Saleh Ibrahim Al Mabrouk, a former Qaddafi insider, is seeking British protection, even though he was a staff member of the Libyan embassy (People’s Bureau) deported from the country in 1984, following the murder of WPC Yvonne Fletcher by a gunman firing from inside the embassy.
Dr Mabrouk is number 107 on the interim government’s most wanted list, suspected of the misuse of state funds. Mabrouk is believed to have last left Libya in the closing days of the Qaddafi regime, with $200 million in cash, on a mission to hire mercenaries from the Balkan states.
Dr. Saleh Ibrahim Al Mabrouk Photo: BBC
A BBC investigation has revealed that Mabrouk has applied for political asylum in the UK, despite being involved in the 11-day siege at the London embassy.
The reason given for his 1984 deportation was that his presence “was not conducive to the public good.”
However, Mabrouk along with other Libyans who had been persona non grata, was back into the UK between 2000 and 2001. This came about under a deal made by then Labour Foreign Secretary Robin Cook, as part of negotiations to bring suspects in the Lockerbie bombing enquiry to trial.
He is now wanted by the Libyan authorities over the suspected $200 million embezzlement. The BBC reports that Libya wants British police help to find evidence of Mabrouk’s financial affairs. They are asking for any assets he owns in the UK to be frozen and returned to Libya.   
In the BBC interview Mubrouk denies receipt of state funds and says that he was on a peace mission to Serbia and Croatia. He says: “I challenge them if I have even $20,000, let alone the $200 million they are talking about. Let them produce proof. They haven’t caught me withdrawing cash from a bank or in an airport with cash on me.”
Once a high-ranking Qaddafi associate and former Dean of Tripoli’s Academy of Graduate Studies, Mabrouk came to the UK in 2000 apparently to read for a science doctorate at Reading university. After completing his studies he returned to Libya but, following Qaddafi’s fall, he went back to England. He now lives with his wife in the south of the country.
The investigation will be aired on File on 4 on BBC Radio 4 on Tuesday 3 July at 8pm UK time.

and.....

More deaths in Kufra reported

Tripoli, 29 June:
After a day of intense fighting in Kufra on Thursday between government troops and Tebu fighters in which 15 people were reportedly killed, the southeastern oasis town is said to be once again relatively quite today, Friday, with only one death so far.
A Tebu spokesman claimed that a woman had been killed in the Tebu neighborhood Qarah Tebu early in this morning by a sniper. She was named as Edigora Ali Lameen, aged 52.
Yesterday’s clashes were among the most bloody since the latest cycle of fighting between Libya Shield forces and Tebus resumed on 9 June. According to a local correspondent from Tadamon News Agency, five members of the Shield forces struggling to pacify the town were killed on Thursday and another 22 wounded when Tebu forces attacked them with heavy artillery. The wounded were airlifted to Benghazi.
Tebu sources counter claim, saying that 10 Tebus were killed yesterday and over 40 residents were wounded, among of them women and children, when Garah Tebu was shelled .
They also claim that that members of Kufra’s majority Zway tribe were fighting alongside the Shield forces.
If true, that would be a significant development.
The present conflict originally broke out in February between Tebus and Zway tribesmen over smuggling rivalries.  However, it quickly turned into a bitter struggle between Tebus and Shield forces when the latter were sent to the town to impose order.  The Zway have been largely uninvolved since then. Moreover, there are areas of the town where Zway and Tebus live peacefully together.  The last thing it needs is a general conflict between Zway and Tebu.
On Monday, troops from the army as well as from revolutionary brigades under the orders of the Defence Ministry arrived in Kufra, but they have not yet been deployed according to Tadamon.
One of the Tebu demands has been that the Shield forces should quit the town and be replaced by the army.




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