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Lebanon FM criticises Hizbollah drone mission near Israel gas rig

By - Jul 04,2022 - Last updated at Jul 04,2022

BEIRUT — Lebanon’s foreign minister said Monday any interference in US-mediated talks to demarcate its maritime border with enemy state Israel is “unacceptable”.

His comments came after Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hizbollah movement launched three unarmed reconnaissance drones Saturday towards the offshore Karish gas field and Israel said it shot them down.

“Any act that falls outside the framework of the state’s responsibility and the diplomatic track within which negotiations are taking place, is unacceptable and exposes [Lebanon] to unnecessary risks,” Foreign Minister Abdallah Bou Habib said after meeting the prime minister, Najib Mikati.

Hizbollah, a powerful Shiite Muslim political and military movement, claimed it had “accomplished” its mission, but Israel’s Prime Minister Yair Lapid said the move undermined chances for a maritime border deal.

Bou Habib on Monday called on “all parties to show a spirit of supreme national interest and commit to... supporting the state in the negotiation process”, in a veiled message to Hizbollah.

“The ongoing negotiations held with the assistance of the US mediator are in advanced stages,” Bou Habib said, adding that the Hizbollah operation was launched without official state consent.

The maritime border dispute between Lebanon and Israel returned to the fore last month after Israel moved a production vessel into Karish, parts of which are claimed by Lebanon.

The move forced the Lebanese government to call for the resumption of US-mediated negotiations that had hit a wall last year over demarcation disputes.

Hizbollah for its part threatened Israel and the company that owns the production vessel against proceeding with extraction, saying it was ready to stand in the way.

Lebanon is now waiting for a response from Israel after relaying its maritime border position to US mediator Amos Hochstein who visited Beirut last month at the request of authorities.

 

Weathering sandstorms,  Iraqis grit teeth and battle on

Jul 04,2022 - Last updated at Jul 04,2022

Milad Mitti, an Iraqi motorcycle delivery rider is pictured in the Iraqi capital Baghdad, on Sunday (AFP photo)

BAGHDAD — Another sandstorm has darkened Iraqi skies and it’s hard to breathe, but Baghdad motorcycle delivery rider Milad Mitti doesn’t have the luxury of missing a day’s work.

Like most people in the now blistering hot desert country, the 30-year-old battles on in frustration, wearing goggles and a grey neck warmer over his mouth and nose “so I can breathe”.

Iraq, still recovering from decades of war, is now facing new environment challenges on an unprecedented scale: since mid-April it has weathered a dozen dust storms that have often shrouded it in an otherworldly orange glow.

Thousands have been rushed to hospitals so far, and on Sunday, as has happened many times in recent weeks, airports were again forced to delay flights for hours due to the poor visibility.

Most Iraqis never bothered with face masks when the COVID pandemic was in full swing, but they do now.

“This is probably the first year that Iraq has had so many sandstorms,” said Mitti in a busy square in the centre of the sprawling capital, which was baking in 40ºC heat.

“It is very difficult to see,” he said. “It’s suffocating. It’s hot. You have to drink juice and liquids to protect yourself.”

A married man, he said he relies on the job which pays him about $600 a month.

“I have a family,” he said. “I have responsibilities.”

 

Layers of dust 

 

On the deserted terrace of a cafe in the capital, the black faux-leather chairs were once more covered with a film of dust.

A waiter, with a brown apron tied around his waist, wiped them with a wet cloth then hosed down the floor with water.

In May, the sandstorms sent at least 10,000 people to hospitals with respiratory problems, claiming at least one life.

Many patients were elderly or suffering from asthma, other respiratory ailments or heart disease, the most at-risk groups.

After Sunday’s dust storm, more than 500 people were rushed to hospitals across the country for respiratory problems, health ministry spokesman Seif Al Badr said on Monday.

At his Baghdad hospital, doctor Seif Ali Abdel-Hamza saw four patients on Sunday, as this time the sandstorm in the capital lasted just hours, not days.

“The more intense the storms get — the more storm days you have, as it has been the case in recent weeks — the more cases of choking there will be,” said the chief resident at Al Kindy hospital.

“The majority of patients suffer from chronic diseases, such as asthma or allergic bronchitis, the majority are elderly.”

 

‘You suffocate’ 

 

Oil-rich Iraq is ranked one of the five countries most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and desertification, a key factor driving the sandstorms.

Over the next two decades, it can expect 272 dusty days per year, and this is projected to surpass the 300-day mark by mid-century, said an environment ministry official.

To combat the phenomenon, authorities say they are considering planting “green belts” around cities.

But the country of 41 million, despite the mighty Tigris and Euphrates rivers, also suffers from water shortages and declining rainfall.

“Before, there was a green belt around Baghdad. If we replant, it will be very useful,” said electrician Razzak Jassem, 35.

Lashing out at the state mismanagement, he denounced the government “failings” and “billions spent on nonsense”.

“Every time the storm is over, you have to wash down the whole house,” he said. “No matter how much you insulate, the dust gets in.”

The worst thing is having to work during the sandstorms, he said during a work break in a shop where he was installing lighting.

“You put on a mask, it gets in the way. You suffocate, you want to take it off,” he said. “You take it off and there is the dust.”

Yet, Jassem, too, as a married father of three, will just have to keep going to make ends meet.

“We’ll stop working when we die,” he said. “As long as we’re alive we have to work.”

Libya protests planned over power cuts, political deadlock

By - Jul 04,2022 - Last updated at Jul 04,2022

A photo taken on Sunday shows burning tyres blocking roads during overnight protests in the Libyan capital Tripoli (AFP photo)

TRIPOLI — Libyans angered by rising prices, chronic power cuts and political deadlock planned further demonstrations Monday after a night of angry protests across the capital.

Masked youths set alight car tyres and blocked roads including a major coastal highway between central Tripoli and its western suburbs, but security forces did not intervene.

Videos carried by local media also showed demonstrations in Beni Walid and the port city of Misrata.

A youth movement calling itself “Beltress” said further protests were planned in Tripoli’s Martyr’s Square at 4:00PM local time (14:00 GMT).

The movement demands elections and the dissolution of both the country’s rival governments and their two houses of parliament.

Public anger has been fuelled by power cuts that often last 18 hours amid soaring summer temperatures, despite Libya sitting on Africa’s largest oil reserves.

The vast country has been mired in political unrest and armed violence since a 2011 NATO-backed uprising toppled and killed Muammar Qadhafi.

On Friday night, protesters stormed the seat of the House of Representatives in the eastern city of Tobruk, ransacking its offices and torching part of the building.

In both Tripoli and the main eastern city of Benghazi, the cradle of the 2011 uprising, thousands took to the streets to chants of “We want the lights to work”.

Some brandished the green flags of the former Qadhafi regime.

 

‘Kleptocracy and corruption’ 

 

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres has called for calm, but UN-mediated talks in Geneva last week aimed at breaking the stalemate between rival Libyan institutions failed to resolve key differences.

Presidential and parliamentary elections, originally set for last December, were meant to cap a UN-led peace process following the end of the last major round of violence in 2020.

But voting never took place due to several contentious candidacies and deep disagreements over the polls’ legal basis between the rival power centres in east and west.

The crisis deepened this year as parliament, elected in 2014 and backed by eastern strongman Khalifa Haftar, appointed a new government to replace that of interim leader Abdelhamid Dbeibah.

He has refused to cede power except to an elected administration.

On top of the political deadlock, Libyans’ living standards have been hit hard by price hikes on food imports due to the war in Ukraine.

Meanwhile supporters of the rival administration of former interior minister Fathi Bashagha have shut down several oil facilities since April as leverage in his power struggle with Dbeibah.

Libya expert Jalel Harchaoui told AFP that “kleptocracy and systematic corruption” were rife in both eastern and western Libya.

For normal Libyans however, the year “has been extremely painful” because the country “imports almost all its food and the Ukraine war has hit consumer prices”, Harchaoui said.

Hundreds of anti-coup protesters in Sudan defy security forces

By - Jul 03,2022 - Last updated at Jul 03,2022

Sudanese demonstrators perform the Friday prayer in the southern area of the capital Khartoum last Friday (AFP photo)

KHARTOUM — Hundreds of Sudanese protesters demanding an end to military rule took to the streets of the capital Khartoum and its suburbs for a fourth straight day on Sunday, witnesses said.

A violent crackdown by security forces during mass rallies on Thursday killed nine people, according to medics, the deadliest day for several months in the long running protests against a military takeover last October led by army chief Abdel Fattah Al Burhan.

Recent protests have seen crowds burn tyres and barricade roads with bricks, with security forces using live bullets, firing barrages of tear gas canisters and using powerful water cannons, according to medics and the United Nations.

Demonstrators demand a restoration of the transition to civilian rule that was launched after the 2019 ouster of Omar Al Bashir, which the coup derailed.

"We will continue this sit-in until the coup is overturned, and we have a fully civilian government," demonstrator Muayyad Mohamed told AFP in central Khartoum.

 

The death toll from protest-related violence has reached 114 since last year’s coup, with the latest fatality recorded Saturday when a demonstrator died from wounds sustained at a June 16 rally, according to pro-democracy medics.

 

‘We will not compromise’ 

 

“We will not compromise until the goals of our revolution are realised,” said Soha, 25, another protester, who only gave her first name.

“We are here in the street demanding freedom, peace, justice, a civil state and the return of the military to the barracks.”

The coup plunged Sudan further into political and economic turmoil that has sent consumer prices spiralling and resulted in life-threatening food shortages.

On Sunday, witnesses reported a heavy deployment of security forces on the streets of Khartoum, including both army vehicles as well as those of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a feared paramilitary unit commanded by Burhan’s deputy, Mohamed Hamdan Daglo.

The RSF incorporated members of the Janjaweed militia, which was accused by rights groups of atrocities during the conflict that erupted in 2003 in the western region of Darfur.

More recently, the RSF has been accused of taking part in crackdowns on protesters marching against the army.

The international community has condemned the recent bloodshed, with the UN rights chief urging an independent probe into Thursday’s violence.

 

‘Dialogue’ 

 

The UN, African Union and regional bloc IGAD have tried to facilitate dialogue between the generals and civilians, which the main civilian factions have boycotted.

On Friday, the three bodies jointly condemned the violence and “the use of excessive force by security forces and lack of accountability for such actions, despite repeated commitments by authorities”.

In the restive Darfur region, which has seen a recent surge in violence, General Daglo — known as Hemeti — on Sunday called “on all political forces, especially the youth, to come to the dialogue table”.

“Dialogue is the only way to guarantee stability in our country,” he said at a ceremony where 2,000 ex-rebels completed their training to join Sudanese security forces.

The integration of former rebel fighters into the Sudanese army and police was part of a 2020 peace deal with rebel groups involved in decades of civil conflict, including in Darfur.

The first of its kind, the cohort “will confront the chaos in Darfur”, Daglo said.

Hundreds have been killed in recent months in Darfur, in a renewed spike of violence triggered by disputes mainly over land, livestock and access to water and grazing.

Palestinian teen shot by Israeli forces dies

By - Jul 03,2022 - Last updated at Jul 03,2022

 

RAMALLAH, Palestinian Territories — A Palestinian teenager died on Sunday after being shot by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank a day earlier, Palestinian medical sources said.

The 17-year-old was identified as Kamel Alawnah by the Palestinian health ministry, which said he "succumbed to wounds from live fire by the occupation army in the abdomen and hand in Jenin".

A Palestinian medical source told AFP that Alawnah was wounded in Jaba, a village in the Jenin governorate of the northern West Bank.

The Israeli military said in a statement on Sunday that "a suspect hurled a Molotov cocktail" at its troops near Jaba on Saturday.

"The soldiers responded with live fire toward the suspect," the army added. "A hit was identified."

Forty-nine Palestinians have been killed since late March across Israel and the Palestinian territories; civilians, attackers and suspected militants among them.

They include Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh, who according to the United Nations was killed by Israeli forces fire while covering a military raid in Jenin.

Author of proposed new Tunisia constitution disavows project

By - Jul 03,2022 - Last updated at Jul 03,2022

TUNIS — The Tunisian jurist who oversaw the drafting of a new constitution submitted to President Kais Saied said on Sunday it has been changed into a charter that could lead to a dictatorship.

Some articles of the draft constitution published last Thursday in the official gazette could "pave the way for a dictatorial regime", warned Sadeq Belaid, who headed a committee tasked with drafting the document.

The published text is "completely different" from that submitted in person to the president late last month, the respected jurist told AFP.

In July last year, Saied orchestrated a dramatic power grab, which many have denounced as a coup, sacking the government and freezing parliament.

Belaid was viewed as a pro-Saied figure even during subsequent moves by the president to further consolidate power this year.

His disavowal of the altered constitution is therefore a blow for the president, just weeks before it is due to go to a referendum.

Contacted by AFP, Belaid confirmed he has withdrawn his support for the draft.

Saied has since his initial power grab moved to rule by decree and extended his powers over the judiciary and the electoral board.

Some Tunisians welcomed his moves against the sclerotic system that emerged from the revolution that toppled dictator Zine Al Abidine Ben Ali in 2011.

But others have protested in the streets and warned that the president is targeting political rivals and dragging the country back towards autocracy.

 

'Completely different' 

 

The constitution for a "new republic" is at the centre of Saied's programme for rebuilding Tunisia's political system.

The president plans to hold a referendum on the constitution on July 25, to mark one year since his power grab.

The draft constitution published last week grants the president wide powers to rule.

It allows him to carry out "executive functions with the help of the government", whose chief he would appoint.

The president would also head the armed forces and name judges. The draft constitution waters down the role of parliament.

Belaid warned that the published document "contains risks and considerable shortcomings".

He specifically points to one article, which he said carries an “imminent danger” because it would give the president “very wide powers... that could lead to a dictatorial regime”.

“That is why, as head of the national constitution committee... I declare, regretfully and in true conscience... that the committee has nothing to do with the document that the president” will submit for approval in a referendum, Belaid added.

The altered draft constitution augurs a “bad future” for the country, he contended.

His misgivings were initially published as a letter in the Assabah newspaper, and he spoke subsequently to AFP, confirming that he was the author.

“The text that I drew up after several weeks of work with the participation of dozens of experts at all levels is completely different from the text that has been published,” he told AFP.

In contrast to Tunisia’s past constitutions, the draft also makes no reference to Islam as a state religion or basis of the law.

The 2014 constitution, a hard-won compromise between the Islamist-inspired Ennahdha, which was parliament’s biggest party, and its secular rivals created a system where both the president and parliament had executive powers.

It was adopted three years after the North African country’s 2011 revolution that toppled Ben Ali.

Israeli forces say downed 3 Hizbollah drones headed to offshore gas field

By - Jul 02,2022 - Last updated at Jul 02,2022

This image grab from a video released by the Israeli forces spokesperson's unit on Saturday, reportedly shows the interception by the Israeli army of a drone launched by Lebanon's Hizbollah movement that was headed towards an offshore gas field in the Mediterranean (AFP photo/HO/ IDF Spokesperson's Unit)

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM — The Israeli forces said they intercepted three drones launched by Lebanon's Hizbollah movement on Saturday that were headed towards an offshore gas field in the Mediterranean.

"Three hostile drones approaching the airspace in Israel's economic waters have been intercepted," the army said in a statement, adding that the drones were headed towards the Karish gas field, which is partly claimed by Lebanon.

The drones were not armed and did not pose a risk, Israeli military sources said.

One drone was intercepted by a fighter jet and the other two by a warship, the sources said.

Lebanon condemned Israel last month when a vessel operated by London-listed Greek energy firm Energean entered Karish field last month.

Israel claims that the field lies in its waters and is not part of the disputed area subject to ongoing negotiations on the maritime border.

Hizbollah warned Energean against proceeding with its activities.

Lebanon and Israel resumed negotiations on their maritime border in 2020, but the process was stalled by Beirut's claim that the map used by the United Nations in the talks needed modifying.

Lebanon initially demanded 860 square kilometres  of waters it said were in dispute but then asked for an additional 1,430 square kilometres, including part of the Karish field.

Lebanon and Israel remain technically at war and have no diplomatic relations. UN peacekeepers patrol the border.

Israel fought a devastating war with Hizbollah in 2006 and regards the Iran-backed group as one of its principal enemies.

Independent Algeria turns 60, but colonial-era wounds remain

By - Jul 02,2022 - Last updated at Jul 02,2022

In this file photo taken on July 3, 1962, Algerian troops of the National Liberation Army parade in front of the Palais de Sports in Oran, during a ceremony celebrating Algeria's independence (AFP photo)

ALGIERS — Algeria marks 60 years of independence from France on Tuesday, but rival narratives over atrocities committed during more than a century of colonial rule still trigger bitter diplomatic tensions.

The North African country won its independence following a gruelling eight-year war which ended with the signing in March 1962 of the Evian Accords.

On July 5 of the same year, days after 99.72 per cent voted for independence in a referendum, Algeria finally broke free from colonial rule — but memories of the 132-year occupation continue to mar its ties with France.

The country's authorities are planning to mark the anniversary with pomp and ceremony, capped by a vast military parade in Algiers, the first of its kind in 33 years.

A show is also planned at the capital's opera house that "retraces the long history of Algeria", said the minister for independence fighters, Laid Rebiga.

The government has even commissioned a logo — a circle of 60 stars containing military figures and equipment — to mark "a glorious history and a new era".

Algeria's war of independence left hundreds of thousands of dead and, despite a string of gestures by French President Emmanuel Macron, a crisis late last year underlined how spiky the issue remains six decades on.

Macron reportedly questioned whether Algeria had existed as a nation before the French invasion and accused its "political-military system" of rewriting history and fomenting "hatred towards France".

Algeria withdrew its ambassador in response.

"Relations between the power system in Algeria and 'official France' have been punctuated by crises and pseudo-reconciliations since independence," said Athmane Mazouz, head of Algeria's secularist opposition party RCD.

“At this point, all bets are off on whether they can establish better ties.”

 

‘Take heat out of debate’ 

 

France has ruled out any form of apology for the colonial period. But Macron has also made a number of gestures aimed at mending ties with the former colony.

Visiting Algiers during his first presidential campaign in February 2017, he described colonisation as a “crime against humanity”.

He has since acknowledged the French army was behind the death of Algerian nationalist lawyer Ali Boumendjel and anti-colonialist French mathematician Maurice Audin.

France has returned the skulls of 19th century Algerian resistance fighters and opened state archives on the Algerian war.

And the two sides appear to have moved on from the latest crisis. Macron and his Algerian counterpart Abdelmadjid Tebboune confirmed in a June 18 phone call their desire to “deepen” relations.

Tebboune even congratulated Macron on his “brilliant” re-election and invited him to visit Algeria.

Historian Amar Mohand-Amer said it was time for “a quick return to a normal situation”.

“Sixty years after independence, isn’t it time we took the heat out of this debate?”

 

‘Unstable geopolitics’ 

 

Mohand-Amer pointed out that the anniversary celebrations come at a time of raised tensions in the wider region around Algeria.

The country cut ties with regional arch-rival Morocco last August, accusing it of “hostile acts”.

In early June, Algiers suspended a two-decade-old cooperation pact with Madrid after Spain backed Morocco’s stance in the long-running dispute over Western Sahara.

To the east, in war-scarred Libya, the emergence of two rival governments has raised fears of a return to armed conflict after a two-year truce.

And to the south, Mali is in crisis after army officers, disgruntled at the government’s failure to roll back a jihadist uprising, ousted president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita in 2020.

“The very unstable regional geopolitics demand strong positions in the mid to long term and the consolidation of political and economic relations” between Algeria and France, Mohand-Amer said.

But the historian fears that Macron’s move towards reconciliation could face a major test due to gains by extreme right leader Marine Le Pen’s party the Rassemblement National in June elections.

Le Pen said in March that colonialism had “contributed to Algeria’s development” and accused Macron of “spending his life apologising without asking anything in return from an Algerian government that continues to insult France”.

Mohand-Amer warned that “the French far right will transform this mandate into a big battlefield of memories, where revisionism and the falsification of history will be omnipresent”.

UNDP report sheds light on opportunities for inclusive COVID recovery among Arab states

By - Jul 02,2022 - Last updated at Jul 02,2022

AMMAN — Arab states should strengthen capacities, build effective and trustworthy institutional structures that can support a new social contract and enable societies to cope with future shocks and disasters to recover from the impacts of the COVID pandemic, according to the Arab Human Development Report (AHDR) 2022 that the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) launched on Wednesday. 

“Many countries in the Arab states region are still struggling to contend with the devastating socio-economic effects of COVID-19, now compounded by an unprecedented global food, energy and finance crisis that is being precipitated by the tragic war in Ukraine,” said Achim Steiner, UNDP administrator. 

“This new report analyses how countries across the region can get hard-won human development gains back on track through concerted efforts in four key areas. That includes building diversified and competitive economies; shaping accountable and responsive governments founded upon the protection of human rights; nurturing inclusive and cohesive societies; and driving forward a green recovery with sustainable human development at its core,” he said in a UNDP statement. 

Produced by UNDP’s Regional Bureau for Arab States (RBAS), the AHDR 2022 is titled “Expanding Opportunities for an Inclusive and Resilient Recovery in the Post-Covid Era.” 

The report reviews impacts of the pandemic on human development across the region, as well as actions taken by Arab states to contain the outbreak and mitigate its most adverse impacts on people and the economy. The AHDR 2022 argues that getting human development back on track in the post-pandemic era will require greater efforts to make governance systems more accountable and responsive, economies more diversified and competitive and societies more cohesive and inclusive to ensure a resilient recovery for all. 

“The Arab states region has been experiencing various vulnerabilities and is notable for a diverse range of development contexts but the rapid onset of the global pandemic challenged all to varying degrees, presenting new challenges and exacerbating vulnerabilities. But as the report tells us, vulnerabilities are not our destiny,” said Khalida Bouzar, UNDP assistant administrator and director of RBAS. 

“Full of potential and brimming with innovative efforts, the region adopted many positive response measures that could be expanded and scaled-up beyond the COVID response. Knowledge and solutions to tackle the region’s challenges exist. Many are known and have been tested and shown to work. Our collective endeavour now is to create the conditions to allow these efforts to blossom and reach fruition,” Bouzar said. 

The report observes that trust in government is critical to COVID response.

The report underscores that the region’s economy contracted by around 4.5 percent in 2020, with fragile and conflict-affected countries experiencing the largest average drop—around 15 percent.

Despite positive signs at the end of 2021, the report notes that an accelerated recovery in 2022 is unlikely, given emerging challenges facing the region, says the report.

The report points out that prior to the pandemic, inadequate public financing had placed the burden of healthcare on patients. Out-of-pocket spending averaged 28 per cent of household spending in the region, compared with 18 per cent worldwide but with significant variations from a low of 6.6 per cent in Oman to a high of 81 per cent in Yemen.

The report also estimates that the pandemic resulted in a 5 per cent increase in water demand in 2020 for intensified hygiene practices, adding pressures on already scare water supplies across the region, where 18 of the 22 Arab states face serious levels of water scarcity and the average person receives just one-eighth of the global average renewable water per person. 

The report calls for prioritising improved water governance and enhanced waste management as key components for post-COVID recovery to be sustainable and resilient. 

Among the report’s recommendations include: 

Investment in enhancing accountability and responsiveness of governance systems and structures and fostering economic diversification and resilience, by focusing investments on high-productivity goods and services, expanding exports through greater integration with global value chains and tackling persistent unemployment and labour markets challenges. 

The report also calls for enhancing social cohesion and inclusion through inclusive and equitable access to quality social, health and education services; pursuing social cohesion and consensus-building initiatives; enabling greater civic participation and negotiation in the workplace; promoting gender responsive laws and investing in care policies and services; and ensuring inclusion of marginalised and vulnerable groups in all aspects of the recovery, especially women, migrants, refugees and people with disabilities. 

Additionally, the report recommends ensuring that recovery pathways are green, through accelerating and scaling-up clean energy transition initiatives, expanding green transportation and infrastructure investments and closing gaps in water and waste services, among others. 

 

Libyan protesters storm, set fire to parliament in Tobruk

By - Jul 02,2022 - Last updated at Jul 02,2022

This photo taken early on Saturday shows a view of the building used by Libya’s Tobruk-based parliament building in the country’s east, lit up by protesters who broke inside while demonstrating against deteriorating living conditions and political deadlock (AFP photo)

TRIPOLI — Protesters stormed Libya’s parliament in the eastern city of Tobruk on Friday and set parts of it ablaze, venting their anger at deteriorating living conditions and months of political deadlock.

Black smoke billowed as men burned tyres and torched cars after one protester had smashed through the compound’s gate with a bulldozer and others attacked the walls with construction tools, local media reported.

The building was empty, as Friday falls on the weekend in Libya.

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 toppled dictator Muammar Qadhafi.

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.

Libya, sweltering in summer heat, has endured days of power cuts — a situation worsened by the blockade of key oil facilities amid the entrenched political rivalries.

“We want the lights to work,” chanted protesters, some of whom were brandishing the green flags of the Qadhafi regime.

The parliament condemned the “acts of vandalism and the burning” of its headquarters.

The interim prime minister of the Tripoli-based government, Abdulhamid Dbeibah, meanwhile voiced support for the protesters’ concerns in a Twitter message.

 

Political stalemate

 

The two governments have been vying for power in Libya for months: The one based in Tripoli, led by Dbeibah, and another headed by former interior minister Fathi Bashagha, appointed by the parliament and supported by eastern-based strongman Khalifa Haftar.

Presidential and parliamentary elections, originally set for last December, were meant to cap a UN-led peace process following the end of the last major round of violence in 2020.

But the vote was never held due to several contentious candidacies and deep disagreements over the polls’ legal basis between the rival power centres.

The United Nations said on Thursday that talks between the rival Libyan institutions aimed at breaking the deadlock had failed to resolve key differences.

Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh and High Council of State president Khaled Al Mishri met at the UN in Geneva for three days of talks to discuss a draft constitutional framework for elections.

While some progress was made, it was not enough to move forward towards elections, with the two sides still at odds over who could stand in a presidential vote, said the UN’s top Libya Envoy Stephanie Williams.

 

‘Escalating quickly’

 

The prospect of elections appears as distant as ever since the parliament appointed Bashagha, arguing that Dbeibah’s mandate had expired.

After Bashagha failed to enter Tripoli in May, the rival administration has taken up office further east in Sirte, Kadhafi’s coastal hometown.

Recent weeks have seen repeated skirmishes between armed groups in Tripoli, prompting fears of a return to full-scale conflict.

Demonstrators rallied in other cities on Friday including Tripoli, where protesters held up crossed-out images of both Dbeibah and Bashagha.

“Popular protests have erupted across Libya in exasperation at a collapsing quality of life, the entire political class who manufactured it, and the UN who indulged them over delivering promised change,” tweeted Tarek Megerisi of the European Council on Foreign Relations.

“Things are escalating quickly and the response will define Libya’s summer.”

Libya’s National Oil Corporation announced on Thursday losses of more than $3.5 billion from closures and declared force majeure on some sites, a measure freeing it of contractual obligations due to circumstances beyond its control.

The NOC said output “dropped sharply” and exports had fallen to 365,000-409,000 barrels per day (bpd), a loss of 865,000bpd compared with the average before April.

Eastern-based strongman Haftar’s forces control major oil facilities.

A drop in gas production has contributed to Libya’s chronic power cuts which can last around 12 hours a day.

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