Libya holds its first democratic election in July. No one knows how many bumps lie in the road ahead. But despite all those challenges, and the years of heartbreak behind them, Libyans seem hopeful.
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Museums have been erected to commemorate the battles fought and the martyrs lost. Schools are back in session. Hundreds of former rebels are training to join the new national army. People are even talking about tourism and business. Women are discussing women’s rights and lecturing men on politics. Where the weak transitional government is failing, ordinary citizens are helping one another rebuild. Young people are getting creative. All this induces optimism; optimism of the wild, determined sort. (All Images by Yuri Kozyrev/ Noor for Time)
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Divisions threaten to mar Libyan elections
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The country’s current fledgling state institutions are fragile and largely powerless. The Libyan roadmap aims to elect a general national congress, a 200-member transitional parliament, where 80 seats are allocated to representatives of political entities, and 120 seats to individuals. Once this transitional parliament has been elected, the remit of the interim governing National Transitional…
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While some firms may be coy about revealing their interests, it appears that others have been put off by the arrest and imprisonment of ABB workers in 2008 and the continued unpredictability in the country ahead of this week’s elections. Not even the lure of lucrative contracts to rebuild Libya’s war-torn infrastructure and the presence…
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