Deal to calm one of Arab world's most chaotic nations?

BENGHAZI, Libya -- Representatives of Libya's rival factions who are sitting in Tunis and negotiating through a U.N.-brokered process announced on Tuesday that they have formed a unity government aimed at stemming the chaos that has engulfed the country for the past years.

In a statement received by The Associated Press, the Unity Presidential Council said it has agreed on a 32-member Cabinet, drawn of representatives from across the country.

But whether that government will in fact be able to govern the country remains to be seen.

Libya slid into chaos following the 2011 toppling and killing of dictator Muammar Qaddafi. Since 2014, its divisions only increased, splitting it into two governments and parliaments -- the internationally recognized one in the country's east, and an Islamist-backed one in the capital, Tripoli.

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Each side is backed by an array of different militias. Amid the chaos, a Libyan affiliate of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has surged, claiming responsibility for a series of deadly attacks as it tries to expand its territory and take control of oil terminals and fields, the sole source of Libya's wealth.

In December, blocs from Libya's rival parliaments signed a U.N.-brokered deal to form the unity government and established a Unity Presidential Council. The Tunisia-based council includes representatives from the rival parliaments and governments, as well as delegates from other factions. But other members of both the two main factions have rejected the U.N. plan.

The United Nations has warned that further delays in implementing the plan will only empower the Islamic State affiliate. U.N. envoy Marin Kobler, who brokered the plan, tweeted this week that the Libyan political scene is divided while the Islamic State is united and "set on its destructive goal."

On Monday, Libya's Foreign Minister Mohammed al-Dairi of the internationally-recognized government told reporters during a visit to Cairo that the formation of a Cabinet was a condition for lifting an international arms embargo on the Libyan army fighting Islamic militants.

According to the U.N.-brokered deal, the new government should be based in Tripoli but it is not clear if the current Tripoli-based authorities opposing the deal would allow it to operate in peace. Recently, a Tripoli-based premier threatened use of force against a security committee tasked to secure venue for the new government.

The head of the council who is also supposed to be the prime minister, Fayez Sarraj, has struggled to form the unity government, which now has 10 days to win the internationally-recognized parliament's endorsement. The lineup of the new Cabinet was approved by seven out of nine members of the presidential council, after two members walked out in protest.

The Cabinet's line-up shows that the premier-designate Sarraj has tried to bring together opponents, a tactic that only could potentially lead to a new round of bickering.

The designated defense minister, Al-Mahdi al-Barghathi, is one of eastern Libya's army commanders. He has been fighting a coalition of Islamic extremists, including the local affiliate of the extremist Islamic State group in the eastern city of Benghazi. He answers to army chief Gen. Khalifa Hifter, one of Libya's strongmen and a divisive figure because of his enmity with Islamists of all shades, including the relatively moderate Muslim Brotherhood.

The designated interior minister, Al-Aref al-Khoga, is a former interior minister from the Tripoli-based government who is known to have close ties with Islamists. The designated-information minister, Khaled Nejm, held the same post in the current government based in eastern Libya. He is also a federalist, advocating a semi-autonomous region in the east.

Sarraj's council is also supposed to name the army chief, but who will hold that post has been another divisive issue. The current army chief, Hifter, is despised by the Tripoli-based rivals.

Sarraj also split some portfolios, distributing the sections among different tribes, political groups and regions. Instead of one foreign minister, he designated three diplomats for the job - one to head the foreign ministry, another for Arab and African affairs and a third one for international relations.

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