Former Libyan wartime interim prime minister Mahmoud Jibril took an early lead in the country’s national assembly election, according to partial tallies released on Monday that pointed to a weaker-than-expected showing for Islamist parties.
If confirmed, that trend would set Libya apart from other Arab Spring countries such as Egypt and Tunisia where groups with overtly religious agendas have done well — although Jibril insists his multiparty alliance is neither secular nor liberal and includes Shariah, Islamic law, among its core values.
Saturday’s poll was the first free national vote in six decades and drew a line under 42 years of rule under former dictator Muammar Qaddafi. International observers said it went well despite violent incidents that killed at least two people.
Photo: Reuters
Jibril’s National Forces Alliance (NFA) was heading for landslide victories in the Tripoli suburb of Janzour and the western towns of Zlitan, Misalata, Tarhouna and Khoms with over three-quarters of votes counted in those areas.
In Misrata, Libya’s third-largest city, the Union for the Homeland led by a long-time Qaddafi opponent, was on course to win.
Neither the Justice and Construction Party — the political wing of the Libyan counterpart of the Muslim Brotherhood that now dominates the Egyptian parliament — nor the Islamist group al-Watan, led by an ex-rebel militia chief, did well in the tallies.
A strong showing by the US-educated Jibril, a fluent English-speaker already familiar in Western capitals for conducting most of the rebels’ diplomacy last year, is likely to sit well with NATO allies who backed the uprising to oust Qaddafi.
However, analysts cautioned that parties only have 80 out of 200 seats in a new assembly which will appoint a caretaker prime minister and Cabinet before preparing for parliamentary polls next year, with independent candidates taking the other 120.
“We have no way of knowing yet how they [the independents] will align themselves,” Hanan Salah of advocacy group Human Rights Watch said.
There is speculation that Jibril, who will not sit in the new assembly himself, may seek a greater role for himself — possibly even as president if such a position is created in a new Libyan constitution to be drafted next year.
However, on Sunday, Jibril brushed aside such speculation and offered talks with all of Libya’s 150-plus political parties to create a grand coalition.
“We extend an honest call for a national dialogue to come altogether in one coalition, under one banner ... This is an honest and sincere call for all political parties operating today in Libya,” Jibril told a news conference.
“In yesterday’s election there was no loser or winner ... Whoever wins, Libya is the real winner,” he added.
Nearly 1.8 million of 2.8 million registered voters cast their ballots, a turnout of around 65 percent, authorities said.
Earlier, international observers declared Saturday’s election credible, saying violent incidents and anti-vote protests in the restive east failed to stop Libyans turning out.
“It is remarkable that nearly all Libyans cast their ballot free from fear or intimidation,” Alexander Graf Lambsdorff of the European Union Assessment Team told a news conference.
Referring to the theft and burning of a number of ballot boxes and protests by demonstrators seeking more autonomy for the east of the country, he said: “These incidents do not put into question the national integrity of the elections as a whole.”
“Eleven months after the building of a new nation, there are bound to be spoilers,” said Carter Center vice-president of peace programs John Stremlau. “Libyans determined to continue with the voting process is what gives us hope for the future.”
Reaction to Jibril’s coalition call was cautiously positive.
“The door is open to dialogue now for all Libyans,” said Ali Rhouma El-Sibai, head of the hardline Islamic al-Assala Group. “But no agreement is possible until we know what is on the table. We cannot compromise our principles.”
The storming of four voting centers by protesters in the eastern city of Benghazi on Saturday underlined that eastern demands ranging from greater political representation for the region to regional autonomy will not go away.
Gunmen, demonstrating their grip on the eastern oil terminals from which the bulk of Libya’s oil exports flow, blocked three main ports a day before the vote.
Many easterners are furious that their region, one of three in Libya, was only allotted 60 seats in the new assembly compared with 102 for the western region that includes Tripoli.
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