Libyans set fire to Parliament over living conditions | Daily News

Libyans set fire to Parliament over living conditions

LIBYA: Protesters have stormed Libya’s Parliament in the eastern city of Tobruk and set fire to part of the building.

Images posted online showed thick columns of smoke as the demonstrators burned tyres outside.

There have been rallies in other Libyan cities against continuing power cuts, rising prices and political deadlock.

In the capital, Tripoli, where a rival administration holds sway, protesters called for elections.

Libya’s House of Representatives has been based in Tobruk, more than 1,000 kilometres east of the capital Tripoli,  since an east-west schism in 2014 that came three years after a mass popular revolution.

A separate legislature, formally known as the High Council of State, is based in Tripoli as the oil-rich North African country remains divided between rival administrations vying for control.

Their demand was backed by the head of the interim unity government, Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, who said all the country’s institutions needed to be changed.

United Nations Libya envoy Stephanie Williams told the BBC the violence was unacceptable but described it as a “clarion call for the political class” to put their differences aside and hold the elections that the Libyan people want.

People protest against a power outage inside Martyrs’ Square, in Tripoli, Libya July 1, 2022. There were also protests in the capital, Tripoli

The unrest comes a day after United Nations-brokered talks in Geneva aimed at paving the way for a ballot ended with little progress.

Libya has been in chaos since the NATO-backed uprising in 2011 that ousted long-serving ruler Col. Muammar Gaddafi.The oil-rich country, a key departure point for some of the thousands of migrants travelling to Europe, once had one of the highest standards of living in Africa, with free healthcare and free education.But the stability that led to its prosperity has been shattered and Tripoli has seen frequent fighting between rival forces.

- YAHOO NEWS

 


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