Speaking to Sky News Arabia, Yassin explained that Britain read this scene, and therefore issued a warning to its nationals a few days ago to leave Libya.
Tripoli is witnessing “militia” movements, which observers described as bearing the harbingers of a new war, in which groups including “Al-Baqara”, “Deterrence”, “Ghaniwa”, “444”, “Tripoli Revolutionaries”, “Battalion 301” and the “Stability Support Agency” participate in it. “Before and after announcing the postponement of the presidential elections, which were scheduled for last December 24, it engaged in clashes with medium and heavy weapons, to control vital areas in the capital and impose its influence there.
Yassin blamed the Western countries for their positions on the Libyan crisis, considering that their interventions went in the direction of maintaining extremist currents, although the Libyan people pronounced it (as it became clear in the results of the 2014 parliamentary elections in which these currents lost), adding: “It seems that there is a will for For Libya to be the incubator for the Brotherhood, which no longer has a place in the countries of the region, such as Egypt and Tunisia.
Yassin expected that a solution to the Libya crisis is still far away, justifying this by saying that “the diagnosis from the beginning was wrong because the crisis was dealt with as a political, and basically a security crisis, and before talking about the political track and the elections, it was necessary to disarm the militias as a basis for the solution.”
The Libyan politician called on the United Nations and foreign countries, if they wanted to deal seriously with the situation, to “work on this file and expel the ideological groups affiliated with the terrorist Brotherhood,” marveling at what he described as “double standards”, at a time when the West stands firmly against extremist currents. In countries like Afghanistan, he “turns a blind eye to it in Libya”.
The most dangerous scenario
The head of the local council of the Tobruk region previously expressed his fear that the country is heading to the most dangerous scenario, which is “partition”, in light of the continuation of what he described as the marginalization of the regions of Cyrenaica (east) and Fezzan (south), and the complaints of the people that while their land is abundant With water, oil and other resources, these benefits are not reflected in the population.
Analysts describe Libya as a “sleeping giant”, according to Yassin, because of its capabilities and capabilities in the fields of oil and tourism that could generate great income if they were used well.
Yassin stressed that the solution begins with “disarming and dismantling the militias, and removing mercenaries and foreign fighters, and then the Libyans will be able to sit down and reach understandings among themselves.”
Since the postponement of the presidential elections, most Libyan cities have witnessed demonstrations calling for elections as a way out of the chaos that the country is suffering from, stressing that the current situation is not likely to enter into a state of conflict and return to square one.
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