Fathhallah Al-Sariri, a member of Libya’s 6+6 Joint Committee said that they will hold meetings in Libya on Wednesday. The committee is tasked with establishing the nation’s electoral laws.
He said in press remarks that the committee will “discuss priorities and working mechanisms, and determine the times and locations for the next meeting.”
Al-Sariri added that the committee will “work to lay legal and technical foundations for joint work in the spirit of one team.”
He stressed that they would “exert all efforts to fulfil the people’s desires to hold Parliamentary and Presidential elections.”
The committee was formed by the Libyan Parliament and the High Council of State (HCS) to establish electoral laws under the 13th Constitutional Amendment.
Notably, the United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) vowed that it will provide technical and logistical support to the Committee to establish electoral laws.
The UN Envoy to Libya, Abdoulaye Bathily urged the leaders of the two chambers to expedite the work of the committee, and publish a timebound work programme.
“For elections to take place this year, the electoral laws must be completed in time for the High National Elections Commission (HNEC) to begin implementing the electoral process by early July,” Bathily said in his brief to the UN Security Council last week.
Bathily noted that the Chairman of HNEC, Emad Al-Sayeh informed him that, “while awaiting the electoral laws and the provision of necessary funds, the Commission has started initial preparations for the electoral process.”
He called on the Libyan government to provide HNEC with “all necessary resources to complete its mandated tasks in a timely manner.”
“Leaders and representatives of military units and security formations operating in western, eastern, and southern Libya committed to supporting all stages of elections, reject violence throughout Libya, take practical steps for the safe return of internally displaced persons, release detainees, and address the missing persons issue in the context of national reconciliation,” Bathily told the Security Council.