So that there is no war!
What should happen?
Since creation, humans have tried to change the use of violence as a means to resolve conflicts resulting from the conflict of interests that occur in the nature of the human formation, which is based on the keenness of every human being to preserve the most significant amount of essential and non-essential benefits for him, and for him alone.
However, since time immemorial, humanity has not fully obtained a way to end the idea of resorting to violence when there is a conflict of interests. Still, at the same time, we cannot deny that the world today has become much better, as we have been able to find means that may postpone the use of violence as a means in the event of a conflict of interests. We will replace violence with negotiation, economic pressure, technology, and many other means that have managed to break the link between conflict of interests and the use of violence as a solution.
In Libya, we are unfortunately far from this proposition. Reality and recent history say that we often use violence to manage conflicting interests and rarely resort to other means that may guarantee everyone’s interests and do no harm to anyone.
It is said that wars are part of the political process, but their bill is usually not paid by those who practice politics but by those in whose name politics is practiced. And what we are going through these days in Libya is the best evidence, as all indications show that the specter of war may return at any time or even at any hour.
After the blockage that occurred in the person who heads the executive authority between two governments, the first sees itself as having the legitimacy to hand over power to an elected body of the people. The second sees in itself that it has been able to gain the confidence of the parliament (which extends itself) and thus wears the patched robe of legitimacy due to its frequent use on all Occasions!
On the ground, the matter is not much different. The military authority in eastern Libya stands behind the Pashaga government in front of the cameras and makes deals with the Dabaiba government in the lobbies of Emirates hotels. The appointment of (Ben Qadara) as the head of the National Oil Corporation is not far away. In the Libyan West, the matter is more complicated, as for the first time during In the last ten years, there has been a dispute in Misurata (the city of war and peace), and it is partly divided between Dabaiba and Bashagha, but recently all indications have shown that the latter has managed to convince most of the armed factions in the city to side with him, and he has also managed to convince other armed factions surrounding the center of the capital, Tripoli, such as (Al-Nawasi - and Al-Juwaili Forces) and was also able to neutralize (so far) strong factions such as (Brigade 444 - and the Special Deterrence Force).
Nothing remained with the Dabaiba government except (the joint force Misurata) and (the Tripoli Stabilization Support Device), and this force does not constitute an allied weight equivalent to the forces aligned with the Bashagha government, which warns those who have (insight) that the military clash is only a matter of time.
Wisdom today requires neutralizing the option of war, which is looming on the horizon (people have not recovered from the last war that took place at the beginning of 2019 so far), nor does the economic situation in Libya allow it to be subjected to a new blow, as stagnation is still dominant in most financial transactions. It is not news of descent. The price of the Libyan dinar against foreign currencies is far away. In a global situation going through successive economic crises, you can imagine what war can do to us.
Today we are in a situation where we do not choose between bad or worse, but rather between people's life or death.
Compromising the legislative authority will not be welcomed by the House of Representatives and the state and their military allies, especially at this stage, nor will the presidential elections be born in the light of the current polarization, so some suggest that the two governments be abolished (like what we do with our children when they disagree over a toy, so we deprive them of them both, and what a harsh analogy!!) Where a third figure proposed a mini-government that might distance us from the specter of war, even partially. This proposition becomes clear that it is challenging to implement in light of the strange withdrawal from the international community, the main player in the Libyan arena over the past years, as well as the military division that has taken place in the western region between the two governments, as well as the information that came out as a result of the meeting of the Speaker of Parliament (Aqila Saleh) with the Turkish President (Recep Tayyip Erdogan). Recently, in the Turkish capital, Aqila Saleh categorically rejected the Turkish president’s proposal that the Parliament withdraws its support for the Pashaga government and that there be a third government that ends the conflict over the presidency of the executive authority, arguing that the parliament’s prestige (imagined in Aqila Saleh’s mind only) will be affected considering that Parliament It is the most critical institution in Libya and prevents the country from falling into chaos and political vacuum.
Also, the fears raised about the Bashagha government taking over the reins of the command are valid, as Bashagha’s alliance with Aguila Saleh and (Khalifa Haftar) foretells a government that has all the tools to transform it into a government (that has no validity date), and this is evident from Libya’s very recent history with governments that have exceeded their term. , where Libya passed governments that were less cohesive than the government of Bashagha and were able to extend itself for years, let alone a government that managed to gather the threads of military power in one alliance, each party of the coalition has an interest in the continuation of this government, in a country that does not have institutions that can return Things are correct if a defect occurs within the specified period of the government. It does not have a ruling constitution that regulates the process of peacefully and smoothly transferring power.
That is why we find no escape from war except by people going out to the squares demanding life in exchange for death, rejecting war for any reason, and forcing those fighting in their name for power to sit at the dialogue table. This uprising can be described as an uprising to preserve the people's interest until God writes for us a new chapter. We pray that it will be safer than what we are now afflicted with.