شاشة عرض مغناطيسية لصور السيلفي
وفر 26%! اشترِ شاشة عرض مغناطيسية لصور السيلفي بسعر 399 د.ل فقط في ليبيا. متوفر
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Libya Press
Libya's Supreme Council for State has formally initiated moves to remove Abdullah Qadribuh from his post as chairman of the Administrative Control Authority, the country's top anti-corruption body. The decision, confirmed during a tense session in Tripoli on May 24, marks the most significant institutional confrontation in Libya this year and exposes deep divisions over how the country should deal with its Gaddafi-era past.
The immediate trigger was Qadribuh's decision to honor several former officials of Muammar Gaddafi's four-decade regime during an official ceremony organized by the Administrative Control Authority. The honors were bestowed on individuals who served in key positions under the former government, a move that provoked immediate and fierce backlash from political factions aligned with the 2011 revolution and its aftermath.
Members of the Supreme Council for State, which serves as Libya's highest consultative and legislative body, described the ceremony as a provocation that undermined the sacrifices of Libyans who rose against Gaddafi's rule. The body convened a special session in the capital capable of exercising its oversight powers over senior officials appointed under national consensus agreements.
Khalid Mahmoud, reporting for Asharq Al-Awsat from Cairo, described the atmosphere inside the Supreme Council as one of clear escalation. Council members viewed the honors ceremony as crossing a red line, with one source close to the proceedings describing the move as "an insult to every Libyan family that lost loved ones under the former regime." The emotional weight of the Gaddafi legacy continues to shape political decisions more than 15 years after the 2011 uprising.
This confrontation goes beyond a single personnel dispute. It strikes at the heart of Libya's unresolved national question: how should the country balance accountability for the past with the practical need for governance expertise? The Administrative Control Authority manages oversight of public finances across Libya's fragmented institutional landscape, and any disruption to its leadership during a period of fragile stability could have direct consequences for transparency in state spending. For ordinary Libyans already struggling with divided government services and economic hardship, the outcome of this institutional standoff will determine whether anti-corruption efforts continue unimpeded or become collateral in a broader political power struggle.
The path to Qadribuh's removal requires a formal vote with a confirmed quorum, which a May 25 session reportedly failed to achieve. Attention now turns to whether the Supreme Council can marshal sufficient attendance at its next sitting. Meanwhile, Qadribuh has not issued a public statement defending his actions. Libya's international partners, including the United Nations Support Mission in Libya, are closely watching the institutional crisis, aware that further fragmentation of state bodies could destabilize the already fragile political roadmap. For the Libyan people, the hope remains that institutional accountability prevails over political point-scoring, and that the country's oversight bodies remain focused on their essential mission of safeguarding public funds.