Jump to navigation

Libya

Oil output collapses as central bank stand-off continues

The rival Benghazi-based government has ordered a shutdown of eastern fields causing production to drop by half

A collapse in daily oil output has been one of the results of the chaos engulfing Libya’s central bank. After the rival Benghazi-based government of Osama Hammad, backed militarily by the warlord Khalifa Haftar, ordered a shutdown of eastern oilfields, output dropped by more than half in the past week to about 450,000 barrels.

The indefinite shutdown was ordered following attempts by the Tripoli-based government of Prime Minister Abdel Hamid Dubaiba to dismiss central bank governor El Sadeek Omer el Kabir.

Last week, Dubaiba’s Government of National Unity, which is internationally recognised, sent a delegation to take over the central bank governor’s office.

After more than a decade as governor, El Kabir had become increasingly critical of the Dubaiba government’s spending in recent months and was viewed as being supportive of Hammad (AC Vol 53 No 3, From Gadaffi to Qatar).

The United States ambassador to Tripoli, Richard Norland, has warned that the dispute over the leadership of the bank ‘undermines confidence in Libya’s economic and financial stability in the eyes of Libyan citizens and the international community, and increases the likelihood of harmful confrontation’.

El Kabir says he and other senior employees of the institution have been forced to flee the country to escape threats from armed militia groups, noting that four bank staff have been kidnapped.

The bank’s headquarters are now being guarded by western security guards and the United Nations and US have urged talks to mediate the dispute.

In the meantime, however, basic banking services and transactions have been suspended for a week now, and there are growing fears that salaries of public sector employees will be delayed. Abdel Fattah Ghaffar, the new interim deputy governor appointed by the Dubaiba government, has promised to restart operations and pay salaries within days, although it is far from clear that he will actually take office.



Related Articles

From Gadaffi to Qatar

The lake in Benghazi city centre, beside which its two main hotels stand, epitomises Moammar el Gadaffi’s neglect of the east. Officially known as the ‘23 July lake’,...


Who's Who

Power in Libya is concentrated around Colonel Moammar el Gadaffi's family and a select group of politicians

Colonel Moammar el Gadaffi: the 67-year old Brother Leader of the Revolution is still in complete command. All speculation about his children's influence must be put in the...


Political leaders versus the polls

There's little prospect of the politicians agreeing to the elections they had promised but the UN will keep trying to make it work

The legal and political causes of the failure to hold presidential elections on 24 December, the seventieth anniversary of the country's independence, look to ensure they cannot be...


The quiet pro-American

Mostly quiet on the Iraq war, Colonel Gadaffi wants his oil industry to be run by US companies

The normally loquacious Moammar el Gadaffi, erstwhile champion of Arab nationalism and bogeyman of United States President Ronald Reagan (and many others) in the 1980s, spent the weeks...


Rivals fight for control of Sirte

A test of strength over Gadaffi’s home town and local oil assets threatens to become a regional war pitting Turkey against Egypt

The conflict in Libya started as a civil war, became a proxy war, and is mutating again as it reaches a potential new watershed. With battle lines now...