Mahmud Jibril, leader of a political
coalition said to be trending well as votes are tallied in Libya, called
on Sunday for all parties to come together under one banner.
“We extend an honest call for a national dialogue to come all together
in one coalition, under one banner….to reach a compromise, a consensus
on which the constitution can be drafted and the new government can be
composed,” he said.
“In yesterday’s elections, there was no loser and winner at all. Whoever
is going to win, Libya is the real winner of those elections,” he
continued.
The remarks to journalists at his party’s headquarters came hours after
the leader of the rival Justice and Construction Party said that the
National Forces Alliance (NFA) was trending well in the capital and
Benghazi in the east.
Jibril said that his NFA coalition, which he described as a nationalist
movement comprising a broad spectrum of identities and ideologies, would
wait for and abide by official results to be released by the country’s
electoral commission.
He said his party had made no declarations about tallying results and
slammed the media’s use of the label “liberal” to describe his
coalition, insisting that it was an inclusive rather than ideological
organisation.
Earlier, local media and coalition members including its secretary
general, said the NFA had an edge as votes were counted after the first
free elections since the ouster of Moamer Kadhafi’s regime last year.
Libyans on Saturday went to the polls to elect a General National
Congress, a 200-member legislature made up of both party and individual
members, which is tasked of steering the country for a transition
period.
“Early reports show that the coalition is leading the polls in the
majority of constituencies,” NFA secretary general Faisal Krekshi told
AFP.
Votes are still being processed in Libya and the world is waiting in
suspense to see whether the North African nation’s elections hand
victory to Islamists or members of the Muslim Brotherhood as they did in
Egypt and Tunisia.
“The leaders of other political parties should come to the talking table
— be this before or after results are announced. Libya needs everyone.
It cannot be rebuilt with the effort of just one person or movement,”
Jibril said.
The party leader also vowed to reach out to representatives of the
federalist movement, which boycotted and disrupted elections in the
east.
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