Country
Libya
A decade-long transition the Council backed with mandate after three-month mandate, until Kenya, on its way out of an elected term, abstained rather than vote for a sixth one.
Libya's civil war began in February 2011, part of the wider Arab Spring, when protests against Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year rule turned into armed uprising. NATO's intervention, authorized by the Security Council that March, helped topple Gaddafi within months, but not the underlying fracture: for the decade since, Libya has been split between rival governments, parliaments, and armed factions, with periodic ceasefires holding, breaking, and holding again. The UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL), established that September, has spent most of that decade trying to hold together a peace process that outside actors, including Kenya at the Security Council, keep describing as needing to be "Libyan-led and owned" without it ever quite becoming so.
Kenya's own engagement with the file, mostly delivered through the A3 coalition with Gabon and Ghana, ran for the length of its 2021–2022 Council term and tracked one recurring frustration above nearly everything else: UNSMIL's mandate was renewed by "technical rollover", brief extensions of a few months at a time, five times in a row starting with a September 2021 vote, rather than the substantive year-long mandate Kenya and its African partners kept asking for. In one of the file's higher-profile moments, Kenya's Cabinet Secretary for Foreign Affairs, Raychelle Omamo, addressed the Council on this file in person in July 2021, opening her remarks by noting it was the first time she had done so.
Kenya voted for four of those rollovers while formally objecting to each; on the fifth, in July 2022, it abstained instead, an explicit signal of frustration with what its own statement called "a damaging status quo." The pattern finally broke in October 2022, weeks after Abdoulaye Bathily of Senegal, the first Special Representative the A3 had been able to welcome as African, took up the post: the Council adopted a full one-year mandate, ending the rollover cycle that had defined Kenya's entire term on the file.
Running underneath the mandate fight was a second, more human concern the A3's statements returned to at nearly every session: the treatment of African migrants transiting Libya toward Europe, documented by rights groups as involving arbitrary detention, forced labour, and interception at sea followed by return to a country not recognized as a safe port of disembarkation. Kenya's statements pressed this point through both governments Kenya served under this term and through the political crisis that briefly turned violent in Tripoli in August 2022, a reminder that the file's headline story, mandate renewals and rival prime ministers, sat alongside a quieter one that never made it into a single resolution.
Independent Sources for This Introduction
Canonical
- Security Council Adopts Resolution 1970 (2011) — UN Meetings Coverage (SC/10187)
- Security Council Approves 'No-Fly Zone' over Libya, Authorizing 'All Necessary Measures' to Protect Civilians — UN Meetings Coverage (SC/10200)
- Secretary-General Appoints Abdoulaye Bathily of Senegal as Special Representative for Libya — UN Press (SGA/2148)
Contemporary Reporting
- United Nations Support Mission in Libya — background, UNSMIL
- In Hindsight: When Does the Security Council Use 'Technical Rollovers'? — Security Council Report
- UN salutes new Libya ceasefire agreement — UN News
- Libya: 'Historic moment' as UN-led forum selects new interim leadership — UN News
- Why Libya's election got postponed: A quick guide — Al Jazeera
- 2022 Tripoli clashes — Wikipedia
Chronology
| 2011-02-15 | event | Uprising against Gaddafi begins in Benghazi Protests against Muammar Gaddafi's 42-year rule break out in Benghazi, part of the wider Arab Spring, met with lethal force by the state. The uprising becomes civil war within weeks, a decade before Kenya's own Council engagement with the file begins. |
| 2011-02-26 | event | Security Council adopts resolution 1970, refers Libya to the ICC The Council unanimously adopts resolution 1970, referring the situation in Libya to the International Criminal Court, only the second such referral in the Court's history, and the first adopted unanimously. The resolution also imposes an arms embargo and a travel ban and asset freeze on regime figures, establishing the 1970 Committee to oversee it, the same sanctions architecture Kenya would help administer a decade later. |
| 2011-03-17 | event | Security Council adopts resolution 1973, authorizes intervention The Council adopts resolution 1973 by 10 votes to none, with five abstentions (Brazil, China, Germany, India, Russia), establishing a no-fly zone over Libya and authorizing member states to take 'all necessary measures' to protect civilians, explicitly excluding foreign occupation. NATO air operations begin two days later. |
| 2011-09-16 | event | UNSMIL established The Security Council establishes the UN Support Mission in Libya (UNSMIL) at the request of Libya's post-Gaddafi authorities, initially to support the political transition, restore rule of law, and promote human rights. This is the mission Kenya would spend much of 2021 and 2022 pressing the Council to properly resource. |
| 2011-10-20 | event | Gaddafi captured and killed Muammar Gaddafi is captured and killed near Sirte, ending his rule and the first phase of the civil war, but not the underlying instability: Libya spends the following decade fractured between rival governments, parliaments, and armed factions. |
| 2020-10-23 | event | 5+5 Joint Military Commission signs a permanent ceasefire Five officers each from the rival Government of National Accord and Libyan National Army sides sign a country-wide ceasefire agreement, including the withdrawal of foreign forces and mercenaries within 90 days, a deadline that goes unmet, and whose non-implementation Kenya's own statements press repeatedly through 2021 and 2022. |
| 2021-02-05 | event | UN-led forum selects Libya's interim unity government The UN-facilitated Libyan Political Dialogue Forum selects Abdul Hamid Dbeibah as interim prime minister and Mohamed al-Menfi to head the Presidency Council, tasked with leading Libya to national elections on 24 December 2021. Libya's House of Representatives approves the resulting Government of National Unity on 10 March 2021. |
| 2021-05-17 | Statement | Libya (ICC Report): Statement During Briefing Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations |
| 2021-05-21 | Statement | UNSMIL and Libya Sanctions: Statement During Briefing Kenya's national statement, delivered by Amb. Martin Kimani, Permanent Representative |
| 2021-07-15 | Statement | UNSMIL: Statement During Briefing, Delivered in Person by Kenya's Cabinet Secretary for Foreign Affairs Kenya's national statement, delivered by Amb. Raychelle Omamo, SC, EGH, Cabinet Secretary for Foreign Affairs |
| 2021-09-30 | Statement | UNSMIL Mandate Renewal: Explanation of Vote Kenya's national explanation of vote, delivered by Amb. Michael Kiboino, Deputy Permanent Representative |
| 2021-09-24 | Statement | Remarks During the High-Level Meeting on Libya Convened by the President of the Presidency Council Delivered by Amb. Raychelle Omamo, Cabinet Secretary for Foreign Affairs of Kenya; Kimani's own specific role at this meeting is not independently confirmed |
| 2021-11-23 | Statement | Libya (ICC Report): Statement During Briefing Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations |
| 2021-11-24 | Statement | UNSMIL: Statement During Briefing Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations |
| 2021-12-22 | event | Libya's December elections are officially postponed Libya's High National Elections Commission confirms the 24 December 2021 presidential and parliamentary elections cannot proceed, amid unresolved disputes over the constitutional and legal basis for the vote, contested candidacies (including Khalifa Haftar and Dbeibah himself), and a unilaterally issued electoral law from the House of Representatives speaker. No new date is fixed for more than a year. |
| 2022-01-24 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-01-27 | Statement | UNSMIL Mandate Renewal: Explanation of Vote Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations |
| 2022-03-16 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-04-28 | Statement | Libya (ICC Report): Statement During Briefing Kenya's national statement, delivered by Ms. Catherine Nyakoe, First Counsellor |
| 2022-04-29 | Statement | UNSMIL Mandate Renewal: Explanation of Vote Kenya's national statement, delivered by Amb. Michael Kiboino, Deputy Permanent Representative |
| 2022-04-29 | Statement | UNSMIL Mandate Renewal: A3 Press Stakeout A3 collective press stakeout (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-05-26 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-07-25 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-07-28 | Statement | UNSMIL Mandate Renewal: Explanation of Vote (Abstention) Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations |
| 2022-08-27 | event | Deadly clashes erupt in Tripoli between rival prime ministers' forces Fighting breaks out between armed groups loyal to Abdul Hamid Dbeibah's Tripoli-based Government of National Unity and Fathi Bashagha, installed as a rival prime minister by the House of Representatives in February 2022. At least 32 people are killed and over 150 wounded, the worst violence in the capital in nearly two years, and the immediate backdrop to Kenya's next Council statement three days later. |
| 2022-08-30 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement, Following the Tripoli Clashes Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-09-02 | event | Bathily appointed UN Special Representative for Libya The Secretary-General appoints Abdoulaye Bathily of Senegal as Special Representative for Libya and head of UNSMIL, filling a post left vacant since Ján Kubiš's resignation in December 2021, a period that coincided with the run of short technical-mandate rollovers Kenya's statements had repeatedly criticized. Every one of Bathily's predecessors in the role had been non-African; Libya's own Government of National Unity had specifically pressed for an African appointee, a call the A3's own statements echoed. |
| 2022-10-24 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement, Welcoming the New Special Representative Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya) |
| 2022-10-28 | Statement | UNSMIL Substantive Mandate: Explanation of Vote, Resolution 2656 Kenya's national statement, delivered by Ms. Catherine Nyakoe, Legal Advisor |
| 2022-11-09 | Statement | Libya (ICC Report): Statement During Briefing Kenya's national statement; the working copy leaves the speaker's name blank ('STATEMENT DELIVERED BY ….'), so which mission officer delivered it is not confirmed |
| 2022-12-16 | Statement | UNSMIL: A3 Statement, and Closing Remarks in Kenya's National Capacity Permanent Representative of Kenya to the United Nations, delivering on behalf of the A3 (Gabon, Ghana, Kenya), with closing remarks in Kenya's own national capacity |