In his speech to the “Scenarios” program (7/2022), the Libyan House of Representatives spokesman Abdullah Blehaq stressed the right of the Libyan citizen to demonstrate peacefully and demand legitimate rights, but it is unacceptable to resort to acts of burning and destruction, considering that those who carry out acts of Sabotage belonged to a hidden agenda.

The researcher at the Arab Center for Research and Policy Studies, Ahmed Qassem Qassem, considered that what distinguishes this movement is its spread in most Libyan cities with political and military weight, but the regional and international powers are fully aware of the failure to resolve the battles in Libya militarily, noting that the state of detente in the region may be reflected in a way Positive for the Libyan crisis.

A member of the Supreme Council of State in Libya, Abu al-Qasim Qazit, said that the Libyan movement against the political class has many stimuli, the most important of which is the interruption of the electricity network and the mismanagement of the State Council and Representatives of the negotiation file. to their livelihood challenges.

solving the crisis

In light of the regional and international entanglement, Quzit ruled out that international conferences would produce a constitutional base or a government in the country, because they are satisfied with drawing the general features of policies, noting that the Presidential Council, without close coordination with the international mission, cannot propose a solution, whether by forming a third government or reaching To elections with a base acceptable to all.

While Qassem considered that the horizon of the movement is related to the extent to which a kind of framing, structuring and creating mechanisms to activate the ability of change for civil society, considering that the challenge for the political elites is to adopt the demands of the movement and take sides with it instead of the power struggle in the country.

For his part, Belhaq ruled out that the legislative elections would be a solution to the Libyan crisis. Rather, he argued that the presidential and parliamentary elections would resolve the crisis in the event of agreement on the terms of running for the elections, in order to be able to hold a referendum on the constitution for one parliamentary session.

In response to the movement's demands, the Presidential Council in Libya announced a plan to solve the political impasse in the country, ending the transitional stages through presidential and parliamentary elections, within a specific time frame.

The council said that the plan is based on preserving the country's unity, ending the specter of war, ending division, reducing foreign interference, and pushing for a national consensus on the project of change.