Libya's parliament speaker under fire for new constitution panel call
The doors of a polling station remain closed after elections were postponed by a month by the High National Elections Commission in Benghazi, Libya, Dec. 24, 2021. (Reuters File Photo)


Libya's constitution-drafting assembly criticized the parliament speaker's calls for forming a new assembly to draft a "consensual" constitution within a month.

Libyan Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh called on Monday for forming a new assembly of 30 experts representing Libya's three regions to draft a "consensual" constitution within a one-month period.

"The assembly rejects Saleh's proposal because it contradicts the constitutional declaration," the assembly's chief, Al-Jilani Arhoma, told Anadolu Agency (AA).

He warned that the proposal "will drag the country into further escalation."

"The final say is for the Libyan people through a referendum only," Arhoma stressed.

Assembly member Nadia Omran, for her part, considered Saleh's proposal as an attempt to "waste more time."

"It is an attempt to waste time in order to remain in power and prevent the drafting of a constitution and holding elections," Omran told AA.

Libya's presidential elections were scheduled to take place on Dec. 24 under a U.N. road map but were postponed over disagreements among the country's political rivals. No new date for the vote has yet been agreed upon.

Libyans hope that the upcoming elections will contribute to ending the armed conflict that has plagued the oil-rich country for years.