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Libyan agency calls for halt to public sector appointments amid rising wage bill

Libyan agency calls for halt to public sector appointments amid rising wage bill
The Libyan state agency mandated to oversee government performance has called for suspension of public sector appointments and contracts due to an excessive wage bill. (AFP/File)
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Updated 15 January 2025

Libyan agency calls for halt to public sector appointments amid rising wage bill

Libyan agency calls for halt to public sector appointments amid rising wage bill
  • About 89 percent of Libya’s labor force is employed in the public sector, the World Bank said in a 2024 report, based on a 2022 survey

TRIPOLI: The Libyan state agency mandated to oversee government performance has called for suspension of public sector appointments and contracts due to an excessive wage bill.

The Administrative Control Authority said the number of public sector employees in Libya had reached 2,099,200, with salary costs totaling 372 billion Libyan dinars ($75.21 billion) over the past 12 years.

About 89 percent of Libya’s labor force is employed in the public sector, the World Bank said in a 2024 report, based on a 2022 survey.

The authority posted its call on Facebook on Tuesday evening, addressing the Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh, who leads the government of national unity, and all bodies and institutions affiliated with his government. The government has yet to respond.

The public sector payroll in the oil producing country has increased by 104 percent in the last four years. It reached 67.6 billion Libyan dinars last year compared to 33.1 billion dinars in 2021, according to central bank data.

“(As the) public interest requires, you are requested to suspend all procedures for filling public positions (appointments — contracting) until they are reconsidered,” ACA said.

ACA is based in Tripoli and its powers include challenging appointments to public positions and improving accountability and transparency in Libya’s governance. The authority said the rise in the number of public sector employees and their salaries is a result of “random procedures, which imposed financial obligations on the public treasury that the state was unable to fulfill.”

Many Libyans have had to queue at banks to get cash since the 2011 ouster of Muammar Qaddafi followed by the east-west split of rival factions in 2014.


Thieves steal ancient Roman-era statues from the national museum in Syria

Thieves steal ancient Roman-era statues from the national museum in Syria
Updated 11 sec ago

Thieves steal ancient Roman-era statues from the national museum in Syria

Thieves steal ancient Roman-era statues from the national museum in Syria
  • Security had been boosted with metal gates and surveillance cameras after the war started
  • The theft occurred Sunday night, with a broken door found in the classical department. Both officials spoke anonymously, and the government has not yet made a statement
DAMASCUS: Thieves broke into the national museum in the Syrian capital and stole several ancient statues dating back to the Roman era, officials said Tuesday.
The National Museum of Damascus was temporarily closed after the heist was discovered early Monday. The museum reopened in January as the country is reeling from the 14-year civil war and the fall of the 54-year Assad family rule last year.
The museum in central Damascus, the country’s largest, houses invaluable antiquities dating back to Syria’s long history. After the war started, security was boosted with metal gates and surveillance cameras.
An official from Syria’s Directorate-General for Antiquities and Museums told The Associated Press that six marble statues were stolen, adding that an investigation is ongoing.
Another official told AP that the theft occurred Sunday night and was discovered early Monday, when one of the doors at the classical department was found broken and several statues dating back to the Roman era were missing. The official refused to give an exact number.
Both officials spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations because the government has not yet made a statement.
On Tuesday morning, an AP journalist tried to enter the museum and was told by security guards that it was closed. They refused to answer questions about the theft.
The section of the museum where the statues were reported stolen is “a beautiful and historically-rich department with artifacts dating back to the Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine periods,” said Maamoun Abdulkarim, the former head of the government’s antiquities and museums department.
The museum reopened on Jan. 8, a month after rebels ousted President Bashar Assad, ushering in a new era for the country. Fearful of looting, the museum in Damascus closed after the lightning offensive that ended five decades of Assad’s family rule.
After Syria’s conflict began in March 2011, authorities had moved hundreds of priceless artifacts to Damascus from different parts of the country, including the historic central town of Palmyra that was once held by members of the Daesh group.
In 2015, IS members destroyed mausoleums in Palmyra’s UNESCO World Heritage site that is famous for its 2,000-year-old Roman colonnades, other ruins and priceless artifacts.