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Secretary-General of the GPC. Gaddafi renounced all government functions on 2 March 1979. However, as leader of the revolution (officially "Brotherly Leader and Guide of the Revolution"), he retained ultimate control over Libya until he was deposed and killed during the First Civil War in 2011. [9] [10] [11] 3 Abdul Ati al-Obeidi: 1939–2023 2 ...
Abdul Hamid Muhammad Abdul Rahman al-Dbeibeh [3] (Arabic: عبدالحميد محمد عبدالرحمن الدبيبة, also transliterated as Dbeibah; born 13 February 1958 [4]) is a Libyan politician and businessman who is the prime minister of Libya under the Government of National Unity (GNU) in Tripoli.
This article lists the heads of government of Libya since the country's independence in 1951.. Libya has been in a tumultuous state since the start of the Arab Spring-related Libyan crisis in 2011; the crisis resulted in the collapse of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya and the killing of Muammar Gaddafi, amidst the First Civil War and the foreign military intervention.
Three key Libyan leaders said on Sunday they had agreed on the "necessity" of forming a new unified government that would supervise long-delayed elections. A political process to resolve more than ...
Hammad worked in the Libyan government in 2013 as head of the Atomic Energy Commission, which was part of his area of expertise, before taking over as chair of the Office of International Cooperation in the government, which at the time moved to the city of Bayda in eastern Libya after the previous National Congress (the current State Council) mandated a parallel government led by Omar al ...
President of Lebanon: 9 January 2025 Najib Mikati: Prime Minister of Lebanon: 10 September 2021 Libya: Maghreb: Mohamed al-Menfi: Chairman of the Presidential Council of Libya: 10 March 2021 Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh [c] Prime Minister of Libya: 15 March 2021 Mauritania: Mohamed Ould Ghazouani: President of Mauritania: 1 August 2019 Mokhtar Ould Djay
TRIPOLI (Reuters) -Libya's High State Council (HSC) consultative body replaced its leader in a televised vote on Sunday, adding new uncertainty to a political standoff over control of government ...
Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh was selected as Prime Minister of Libya in the Libyan Political Dialogue Forum on 5 February 2021 [1] and a list of cabinet appointees was released on 11 March 2021. [2] The Dbeibeh Cabinet replaced the rival al-Sarraj and al-Thani cabinets.