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Libya rival factions agree to end Central Bank crisis

September 26, 2024 at 4:52 pm

View of the headquarters of Libya’s Central Bank in Tripoli 15 October 2004 [JOHN MACDOUGALL/AFP via Getty Images]

Representatives of Libya’s rival eastern and western legislative bodies, in talks facilitated by the United Nations, signed an agreement on Thursday to end a crisis over leadership of the Central Bank, nominating an interim governor and deputy, Reuters reports.

The agreement could help to defuse a crisis over control of the Central Bank of Libya (CBL) and oil revenues that has sharply reduced Libya’s oil output and exports.

The crisis began when the head of the Presidential Council based in Tripoli, Mohammed Al-Menfi, moved to replace veteran Central Bank Governor, Sadiq Al-Kabir, last month. That led eastern factions to order a halt of output from Libya’s oil fields in protest.

The rival factions agreed on nominating Naji Mohamed Issa Belqasem, the CBL’s Director of Banking and Monetary Control, as an interim governor. Mari Muftah Rahil, who was appointed deputy Governor in 2023, is nominated to continue in his position.

“I want to emphasise the urgent need to end the closure of oil fields and disruption of oil production and export […] and to channel the revenue from this vital resource through the appropriate institutional framework to the Central Bank of Libya,” the UN Secretary-General’s special adviser on Libya, Stephanie Williams, said.

The legislative bodies are the House of Representatives in Benghazi and High State Council in Tripoli.

Libya has been divided since 2014 into rival authorities in the west and east that emerged from the chaos following the fall of Muammar Gaddafi in a NATO-backed uprising in 2011.

“This crisis has shown the imperative for all parties to refrain from unilateral decisions. Such decisions not only escalate tensions, but they also deepen the institutional divisions,” Williams said.

Libya’s National Oil Corporation said on 28 August that oil production had dropped by more than half of typical levels. It has not made public any new production figures since then.

The North African country’s crude exports have averaged about 400,000 barrels per day in September, down from over 1 million bpd in August, shipping data show.

READ: Libya agrees on process for picking Central Bank governor and directors, UN mission says