ليبيا توحّد ميزانيتها: هل يبدأ الاستقرار من بوابة المال؟

Libya's rival governments sign a unified national budget after 13 years of financial division, sparking hope for stability and debate over its true impact.

Libya's rival governments sign a unified national budget after 13 years of financial division, sparking hope for stability and debate over its true impact. | Contesto: cronaca

Punti chiave

  • ليبيا توحّد ميزانيتها: هل يبدأ الاستقرار من بوابة المال؟

Contesto

After 13 years of political fracture and parallel spending, Libya's two rival governments have signed a landmark agreement to unify the nation's budget. The deal, inked this week, aims to merge the separate financial administrations that have governed the eastern and western halves of the oil-rich North African country since the aftermath of the 2011 revolution. The signing ceremony, attended by key figures from both sides, marks the most significant formal step toward fiscal reunification in over a decade. The immediate international response has been one of strong endorsement. The United Nations Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) hailed the agreement as a "critical breakthrough" for national unity and economic stability. Key foreign powers, including the United States, the United Kingdom, and several European Union states, issued statements welcoming the move, framing it as a necessary precursor to holding long-delayed national elections. This external pressure has been a consistent factor, with the international community long arguing that a single treasury is fundamental to ending the cycle of conflict fueled by competing revenue streams. Within Libya, however, public and expert reaction is deeply divided, reflecting the country's entrenched political schisms. For many citizens weary of chronic instability, deteriorating public services, and a collapsing currency, the budget deal is a rare glimmer of hope. Proponents argue that controlling expenditure from a single account will curb corruption, reduce wasteful duplicate spending, and allow for coherent national planning on infrastructure and development. "This is where real unity begins," said one economist based in Tripoli, who requested anonymity due to the topic's sensitivity. "You cannot build a state with two wallets." Yet, a significant body of opinion remains profoundly skeptical. Critics, including powerful factions within both camps, warn that the agreement is a superficial technical fix that fails to address the root causes of Libya's crisis. They point out that the nation remains split between two armed coalitions, each backed by different foreign patrons, with deep disagreements over the...

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Categoria: cronaca