Supporters of Eastern Libyan military commander Khalifa Haftar take part in a rally demanding Haftar to take over after a U.N. deal for a political solution missed what they said said was a self-imposed deadline on Sunday, in Benghazi, Libya, December 17,
NEW YORK - 11 January 2018: The United Nation's political chief pushed Wednesday in Libya for the country to hold credible elections this year in a bid to ensure a peaceful shift from a failed unity deal, The Daily Mail reported.
"The goal is a Libyan goal to end the transition phase with inclusive peaceful process that produces a unified government that is a product of the will of the Libyan people," Jeffrey Feltman said after meeting internationally backed premier Fayez al Sarraj.
A 2015 UN-brokered deal that saw the establishment of Sarraj's Government of National Accord was meant to calm years of chaos that followed the ouster of dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011.
But Libya has remained mired in violent turmoil as the country is riven by divisions between the GNA in Tripoli and a rival administration backed by military strongman Khalifa Haftar in the east.
In September, the UN presented a new plan to hold legislative and presidential elections by the end of 2018 as the GNA's mandate neared the end of its two-year lifespan with no solution to the crisis in sight.
Feltman acknowledged that "credible elections will require an understanding in terms of political agreements" as well as new legislation and the necessary security conditions across the conflict-wracked nation.
But he insisted the UN wants "to do our part in promoting the political, the security, the technical and the legislative condition to see that the Libyan people's desire for these elections can be realized this year."
The United Nations insists sticking to the unity deal still remains the "only viable framework to end the Libyan political crisis" and prepare for elections.
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