A top member of Libya’s liberal
coalition, which claims to have swept 70 percent of seats reserved for
parties in the next congress, on Wednesday rejected political Islam and
called for a civil state.
“The National Forces Alliance is against
the injection of religion into political battles,” Faisal Krekshi,
secretary general of the National Forces Alliance, told AFP in an
interview.
“Our programme is a civil, democratic state based on institutions,” he said.
“Talking about religion is avoiding the
discussion of programmes. This is not the moment to talk about Muslims,
apostates or secularists. We need to re-establish security and draft a
constitution.
“Keeping in mind that this country is
100 percent muslim, Islam will be the main reference in the drafting of
the constitution,” he said, stressing that all political forces are in
agreement on that point.
The NFA, however, is against consulting
the mufti — the country’s highest religious Muslim authority — when it
comes to taking political decisions and drafting legislation, he said.
“At the NFA we do not believe in the ayatollahs, religious guides, or sacred legislators,” he said.
Playing the “Islamist” card, he added,
backfired for rival parties, including the Justice and Construction
Party which was launched by Libya’s Muslim Brotherhood, at the polls.
“It wasn’t a smart move. Moreover, the people saw through it and gave their verdict through the ballot box,” Krekshi said.
Libyans on Saturday voted for a General
National Congress, a legislative assembly where 80 seats are reserved
for party lists and 120 others are open to independents, in the first
elections since the fall of Moamer Kadhafi’s regime.
Preliminary figures, which are still
being rolled out district by district, give a net advantage to the NFA, a
broad coalition of parties rallying behind wartime premier Mahmud
Jibril, over Islamist contenders.
“We expect to get 55 out of 80 party seats (70 percent),” said Krekshi.
“In terms of the individuals or
independents, there are 40 or 45 who believe in the programme of the
coalition. Until now, although we are still counting, the NFA has 95 to
100, or 50 percent of seats, in the next congress.”
That number can grow through new
alliances with individual candidates who share the coalition’s drive to
rebuild Libya, Krekshi continued. Both Islamists and liberals are
courting independents, who hold the majority of seats, in the hope of
securing a clear majority.
“No doubt, we are in contact with
independent candidates whose ideas correspond with those of the NFA,”
said Krekshi, listing security, stimulating the economy and reactivating
the judiciary as top priorities.
The alliance, he said, is a
non-ideological movement which is open to a broad spectrum of parties,
where the only condition of adhesion is patriotism and a commitment to
rebuild the country on the basis of knowledge and experience.
On security, Krekshi faulted the
outgoing National Transitional Council for dealing with former rebels as
part of the problem rather than the solution, stressing that
reintegration and rehabilitation were essential to disarmament.
He also criticised the NTC for its
last-minute amendment of its own constitutional declaration, which
called for new national vote to elect a constituent authority, which was
initially to be appointed by the congress.
Krekshi stressed that this decision,
like other controversial legislation reflecting errors of judgement by
the NTC, could be overturned by the next interim government.
“Thank God the people have voted and these problems will be over,” he said.
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