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Author: LS

Libya: 5+5 Joint Military Committee affirm withdrawal of foreign forces

After its 2-day meetings in Sirte, the 5+5 Joint Military Committee affirm the withdrawal of all foreign forces and mercenaries in accordance with the provisions of the recent UN Security Council resolution on Libya.

“We contacted the executive authority to overcome the latest difficulties that hinder the reopening of the coastal road,” the committee said, adding:” If the road does not open soon, the spoilers will be mentioned by name and the reasons for doing so.”

“We chose the headquarters of the joint force in Sirte to be stationed in two areas, and then will merge as a single force stationed in two camps,” it added.

Libyan oil minister seeks budget approval to hit 1.5 mln bpd target

Libya’s oil production target of 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) by the end of 2021 depends on parliament approving the national budget quickly, Oil Minister Mohamed Oun said during an interview with Reuters on Thursday.

“Unfortunately, the adoption of the budget for the Libyan state in general and the oil sector in particular has been delayed and we do not know when it will be approved,” Oun said in an interview.

“It may have an effect if we do not reach the production target because of a lack of financial means,” he said, adding that a lack of maintenance to surface equipment had caused problems.

Analysts have said the tussle over the budget reflects an underlying effort by factions in the parliament and their allies to show they still wield some control.

This month a subsidiary of state energy producer National Oil Corporation (NOC) suspended exports, citing a lack of financing since September, but later resumed output saying the Central Bank of Libya (CBL) had agreed to disperse funds.

“The last closure could have been avoided if the issue had been discussed and the necessary sums allocated,” Oun said.

Production shutdowns have also been threatened by members of the Petroleum Facilities Guards force, which officially falls under the Defence Ministry as an armed body guarding oil installations.

Before the 2011 uprising the PFG was part of NOC, which chose and paid its members. Critics say it has since 2011 functioned as a loose affiliation of local groups that interfere in oil processes to leverage payments from the state.

“These actions (shutdowns) are individualistic and accountable to the group that carries them out and not affiliated with a specific region or agency,” Oun said.

Though Libya was divided from 2014 between rival governments in east and west, NOC was the only body internationally accepted as a legitimate producer or seller of Libyan oil.

Based in Tripoli, it operated throughout the country across frontlines. Revenue from its oil sales was channelled to CBL, which distributed funds to state institutions in both east and west.

NOC and CBL have disputed each other’s statements of revenue raised by oil sales and last year NOC chairman Mustafa Sanalla suspended the disbursement of money to the central bank. After the GNU was approved, the money began to flow again.

“It seems that the agreement was concluded with international approval and in coordination with the NOC,” Oun said.

NOC is a purely technical institution under the Oil Ministry, he said, adding that the company “does not exercise political work, which is a sovereign prerogative of the government and the Oil Minister”.

Ali Al-Zanati: new batch of cancer drugs will arrive in Libya

Libya’s Minister of Health, Ali Al-Zanati, held a meeting on Tuesday with members of the Medical Supply System and members of the National Cancer Control Program to discussed the final procedures that are set to receive the oncology drugs’ shipment in the coming period.

The meeting discussed adequate mechanisms for setting up a program that tends to organize the tumor file in terms of oncology centers, supervising units and departments, providing specialized medical and medical personnel, and benefiting from internal and international expertise to train national personnel.

Sada newspaper lists names of candidates to hold sovereign positions

Sada economic newspaper has obtained the names of candidates for leadership positions in sovereign posts.

The candidates to hold the sovereign positions who have been counted, according to the requirements, will be handed over by the Presidency to the High Council of State.

Sovereign positions committee’s list of qualified applicants for member of the Central Bank’s board of directors

Sovereign positions committee’s list of qualified applicants for Deputy head of the National Anti-Corruption Commission:

Libya reopening coastal road very soon

Head of the Libyan Presidential Council, Mohamed Al-Mnifi met on Tuesday with the 5+5 Joint Military Committee (JMC), where they discussed the reopening of the coastal road.

Al-Mnifi chaired the meeting in Sirte, and reviewed the readiness of the JMC and its various sub-committees in terms of logistical equipment, security stops, and demining.

He pointed out that finances were allocated to support the opening of the coastal road, confirming that the most important challenges facing the work of the committee would be addressed.

The JMC stated that the road opening is in its final stages, as the area has been cleared of mines, and most of the security stops have been established, confirming that most of the logistical procedures are in their final stages.

Libyan Ministry of Finance instructs CBL to transfer the wife and children grant

 The Ministry of Finance of the Government of National Unity (GNU) sent an official letter on Sunday to the Department of Banking Operations of the Central Bank of Libya (CBL), giving instructions to transfer 1.075.488.000.000 billion Libyan dinars to the Ministry of Social Affairs in order to cover the wife and children’s grant, based on Law No. 44 of 2021.

Ministry of Finance holds meeting to review recommendations on 2021 budget proposal

The Ministry of Finance held a meeting of the ministerial committee to review the recommendations contained in a letter from the House of Representatives on the draft general budget law for 2021.

The committee is chaired by the Minister of Finance and includes the ministers of transport, planning, local government and higher education.

The Ministry of Finance said in a statement that the committee addressed the recommendations and made a series of observations about them, adding that work is underway to complete the study of the recommendations.

According to the ministry, the committee discussed the points in detail, and the ministers presented their views.

It was agreed that discussions would be completed in the coming days to finalize the format of the draft general budget on time.

NOC lifts force majeure on Hariga Oil Port

 Libya’s National Oil Corporation (NOC) has lifted force majeure on Hariga port after settling a dispute over its budget with the new Government of National Unity (GNU), it said on Monday.

NOC’s Arabian Gulf Oil Company (AGOCO) unit, which runs Hariga, said this month it was suspending output because it had not received any state financing since September.

NOC said the GNU would allocate 1 billion dinars ($225 million) as part of an agreement they had reached to end the force majeure it had declared on exports through Hariga.

Libyan interim PM delays trip to east amid strains on unity plan

Libya’s new interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibeh will postpone a visit to the country’s east that had been planned for Monday to demonstrate his unity government’s progress in ending years of division between warring factions.

His spokesman Mohamed Hamouda said in a social media post that the visit had been postponed without giving details.

Dbeibeh’s visit to Benghazi on Monday was to have been the first by a Tripoli-based prime minister in years, a moment intended to encapsulate a rare opportunity to end its conflict.