09 Mar 2021; MEMO: Libya's parliament has postponed to Wednesday its vote of confidence on a new interim government, Anadolu Agency reported.
"The parliament decided to suspend [postpone] the session until tomorrow, Wednesday," Muhammad Al-Raeed, a member of the House of Representatives from the city of Misrata, told Anadolu Agency.
Al-Raeed said: "Tomorrow's session will be for a vote of confidence for the government."
Commenting on the possibility of granting confidence to the government or not, he added: "On Wednesday, God willing, we will definitely give it confidence."
Prime Minister-designate Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh on Tuesday presented his ministerial outline to the parliament.
On Monday, the house met in the coastal city of Sirte for a vote of confidence on the new interim government.
The session began in the presence of 132 out of 200 deputies chaired by Parliament Speaker Aguila Saleh.
On Saturday, Dbeibeh proposed a unity government of 27 members, promising that the government will prioritize "improving services, unifying state institutions, and ending the transitional period by holding elections."
On Feb. 5, Libya's rival political groups agreed in UN-mediated talks to form an interim unity government to lead the country to elections this December in which Dbeibeh was designated as prime minister and to form a new government.
Libyans hope that this will end years of civil war that have engulfed the country since the ouster and killing of strongman Muammar Al-Qaddafi in 2011.
The war was exacerbated when warlord Khalifa Haftar, supported by the United Arab Emirates, Egypt, Russia, and France, among others, carried out a military onslaught to topple the Tripoli-based internationally recognized government for control of the North African country.