Lawmakers from Libya's internationally recognised parliament said Wednesday they support a UN-backed unity government but were "forcibly prevented" from putting it to a vote of confidence.
The parliament, located in the remote eastern town of Tobruk, was unable to hold a confidence vote on the line-up of a new unity administration on Tuesday because it lacked a quorum.
In a petition seen by AFP, 100 of the parliament's 196 members said they supported a unity government but were "forcibly prevented" from voting on Tuesday after receiving threats.
"We, 100 members of the House of Representatives, confirm... our agreement on the proposed cabinet line-up," the lawmakers said.
"We need to decide on an appropriate place for a new parliament session as it has become impossible to hold one" in Tobruk.
The aborted confidence vote came as forces loyal to the recognised government seized a key jihadist bolthole from Islamist militias including the Islamic State (IS) group in the centre of second city Benghazi.
Oil-rich Libya has had two rival administrations since mid-2014 when the recognised government was forced from Tripoli after a militia alliance including Islamists overran the capital.
The United Nations has been pushing both sides to back a unity government.
The UN's Libya envoy Martin Kobler said it was "unacceptable" that lawmakers had been threatened.
"Parliamentarians have to decide freely," he said in a statement, demanding that "the parliamentary process is unhindered and conducted in an environment free from threats or intimidation."
A Presidential Council, born of a UN-brokered agreement in December between representatives of the rival parliaments, last week put forward a unity government of 18 members.
A previous cabinet line-up of 32 ministers proposed by premier-designate Fayez al-Sarraj was rejected by the Tobruk parliament as being too large.
- 'Security vacuum' -
According to the parliament's website, 99 lawmakers would need to vote in favour of the new unity government for it to receive the legislature's approval.
Libya descended into chaos after the 2011 ouster of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi, allowing extremist organisations including IS to gain significant ground.
IS fighters briefly occupied the heart of a city near Tripoli on Wednesday but were ousted by fighters loyal to the government in control of the capital.
The clashes in Sabratha left 18 people dead, officials said in a revised toll, after the jihadists overran the city's security headquarters and other buildings overnight.
The city was the scene of a US air strike last week on a suspected IS training camp that killed more than 40 people including two Serbian diplomats being held hostage.
Sabratha's municipal council said jihadists had exploited the "security vacuum" as security forces conducted raids looking for IS operatives in the suburbs, but said it had since gained "complete control" of the city.
On Tuesday, special forces loyal to the Tobruk government retook the jihadist stronghold of Lithi in central Benghazi after seizing a port area and several army headquarters since launching an offensive at the weekend.
French daily Le Monde said Wednesday that French special forces had been deployed in Libya for "clandestine operations" against IS jihadists.
In response to the report, officials in Paris said a probe had been launched into a possible leak of classified information.
Libya's Tripoli-based parliament, the General National Congress, in a statement, "strongly condemned" the loyalist offensive in Benghazi and also said French commandos were taking part.
France and other Western countries have agreed that military action is needed to dislodge IS in Libya, but world powers want a national unity government installed to request help before formally intervening.
Representatives from neighbouring countries are to meet on March 21-22 in Tunisia "to continue to study ways of finding solutions" to Libya's unrest.
Source :AFP
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