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Second Al-Thani Cabinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Government of Libya, 2014–2021
Second Al-Thani Cabinet

Cabinet of Libya
Date formed29 September 2014
Date dissolved15 March 2021
People and organisations
Head of stateAguila Saleh Issa
Head of governmentAbdullah al-Thani
History
PredecessorMaiteeq Cabinet
SuccessorGovernment of National Unity(merged withGovernment of National Accord)
de factoGovernment of National Stability

Arab LeagueMember State of the Arab League


Judiciary
flagLibya portal

TheSecond Cabinet of Abdullah Al-Thani was approved on 22 September 2014 byLibya's democratically electedHouse of Representatives.[1] The Libyan Supreme Court ruled on 6 November 2014 that the cabinet was "unconstitutional".[2] Prime Minister al-Thani and his government offered their resignation on 13 September 2020 in response to the2020 Libyan protests.[3] In the context of theLibyan Civil War, the Second Al-Thani cabinet was generally referred to as theTobruk government.

Composition

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IncumbentOfficeWebsiteSinceUntil
Abdullah al-ThaniPrime Minister of Libya
Al-Mahdi Hassan Muftah AllabadFirst Deputy Prime Minister and Head of Security Affairs
Abd al-Salam al-BadriSecond Deputy Prime Minister and Head of Public Services (Electricity, Water etc)
Abd Al-Rahman Al-TaherThird Deputy Prime Minister and Head of Authorities (Agriculture etc)
Mustafa T. A. AbotaetaFourth Deputy Prime Minister and Head of Authorities (Defense, Interior, etc)
Muhammed Al-Farooq Abd al-SalamMinister of Local Governmentwww.lgm.gov.ly
Khalifa F. K. AbuhishaMinister of Internal Cooperation
Hisham M. B. BelhajMinister of Housing and Utilities
Al-Mabrouk Ghraira OmranMinister of Justicewww.aladel.gov.ly
Reda Al-MenshawiMinister of Healthwww.health.gov.ly
Umar al-SinkiMinister of Interiorwww.moi.gov.lyArchived 2014-05-20 at theWayback Machine
Fatthi Al-MajbriMinister of Education and Higher Educationwww.edu.gov.ly
Mohamed al-DairiMinister of Foreign Affairswww.foreign.gov.ly
VacantMinister of Defensewww.defense.gov.lyArchived 2015-08-11 at theWayback Machine
Kamal Al-HassiMinister of Finance & Planningwww.planning.gov.ly
Massoud Ahmed Belqasem SawaMinister of Social Affairswww.socialaffairs.gov.ly
Muneer Ali AssrMinister of Economy &[4] Industrywww.industry.gov.lyArchived 2006-08-13 at theWayback Machine

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"New Thinni government finally approved". Libya Herald. 22 September 2014. Retrieved10 October 2014.
  2. ^"Libyan court rules elected parliament illegal". Al Jazeera English. 6 November 2014. Retrieved6 November 2014.
  3. ^"Libya's eastern-based government resigns amid protests".Al Jazeera English. 2020-09-14.Archived from the original on 2020-09-14. Retrieved2020-09-14.
  4. ^"New Thinni government finally approved".

External links

[edit]
  • Libyan institutional transition
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  • General National Congress (GNC, 2012–14)
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  • House of Representatives (HoR, 2014–present)
  • General National Congress (GNC, 2014–16)
  • Constitution
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