
Libyan political leaders forged a pivotal roadmap this Thursday to orchestrate simultaneous presidential and parliamentary elections before February 2027.
The breakthrough emerged from a high-level summit uniting the heads of the nation’s three primary, fractious political bodies.
Aguila Saleh, Mohammed Takala, and Mohamed al-Menfi signed a comprehensive principles document aimed at ending the protracted transitional phase.
This strategic accord establishes a supreme committee tasked with supervising the complex execution of the upcoming national electoral process.
The comprehensive plan prioritizes unifying sovereign institutions and reinforcing state sovereignty across the historically fractured North African landscape.
Crucial economic and financial reforms are embedded within the text to protect public funds from rampant regional corruption.
The leaders explicitly reaffirmed their commitment to the foundational 2011 Constitutional Declaration and the historic 2015 Moroccan political agreement.
They pledged flexibility, allowing the roadmap to dynamically adapt to unfolding political shifts and future grassroots national initiatives.
Libya has suffered under the heavy weight of bitter division, split between competing rival administrations in the east and west.
Previous democratic endeavors repeatedly faltered due to fierce, unyielding disputes over constitutional frameworks and controversial candidate eligibility criteria.
The fragile nation now stands at a delicate crossroads, attempting to stitch together a fractured state through institutional unity.
