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The General People's Committee (Arabic: اللجنة الشعبية العامة, al-lajna ash-sha'bēya al-'āmma), often abbreviated as the GPCO, acted as secretaries for various Libyan ministries during the era of the Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. It served as the intermediary between the masses and government leadership and was composed of a general secretary and twenty secretaries of some 600 local "basic popular congresses" (BPC), GPCO members were elected by the country's parliament, the General People's Congress, and had no fixed terms.
It was the rough equivalent of the cabinet in many republics, constitutional democracies, and constitutional monarchies, as well as the Executive Board of the rival National Transitional Council, which ultimately replaced the jamahiriya as Libya's dominant force as a result of the 2011 Libyan civil war. The GPCO was scattered by the fall of Tripoli in August, with some of its members fleeing into exile, some becoming prisoners of war, and some remaining at large in Libya.
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In March 1977, the General People's Congress (GPC) adopted the "Declaration of the Establishment of the People's Authority" and proclaimed the Socialist People's Libyan Arab Jamahiriya. The people exercise authority through the people's committees, people's congresses, professional associations, and the GPC. Elections are direct, and all voting consists of a show of hands or a division into yea-or-nay camps. Suffrage and committee or congress membership are open to all Libyan citizens eighteen years of age or older in good legal and political standing.
In theory, the residents of each zone elected their own people's committee. Similarly, the residents of each branch municipality elected their own Basic People's Congress (BPC). The BPC members then elected a chairman and a five-member branch or municipal people's committee. The General People's Congress was made up of the chairmen of the BPC, the branch and municipal people's committees, and representatives of the people's committees for unions, professional associations and student unions.[1] The GPCO replaced the former Council of Ministers, its members being referred to as secretaries rather than ministers. Legislative and executive authority was vested in the GPC. This body, however, delegated most important authority to its general secretary and General Secretariat and to the GPCO. Muammar al-Gaddafi, as general secretary of the GPC, remained primary policy maker. As a part of a decentralisation program undertaken during September 1988, all GPCO secretariats, except those responsible for foreign affairs and information, were relocated away from Tripoli. In early 1993 it was announced that the Secretariat for Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation was to be moved to Ra's Lanuf.[2]
As of 22 January 2007, the current General People's Committee consisted of the following members:[4]
Name | Ministry | Website | Start term | End term |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mustafa Miftah Bel'id al-Dersi | Minister of Youth and Sports | www.gpcs.gov.ly | January 2006 | |
Abu-Bakr Yunis Jabr | Minister of Defence | January 1970 [5] | killed 20 October 2011[6] | |
Abd-al-Hafid Mahmud al-Zulaytini | Assistant Secretary (Deputy Prime Minister) | January 2007 | ||
Baghdadi Mahmudi | Secretary of the GPCO (Prime Minister) | March 2006 | fled the country 23 August 2011 | |
Abdel Rahman Shalgham Moussa Koussa |
Minister of Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation | www.foreign.gov.ly | 2000 4 March 2009 |
replaced 4 March 2009 resigned 30 March 2011[7] |
Ehtuish Ehtuish | Minister of Health | 2000 | ||
Tahar al-Hadi Al-Juhaymi | Minister of Planning | 2006 | ||
Ali Abd-al-Aziz al-Isawi | Minister of Economy, Trade and Investment | January 2007 | ||
Ammar Latif | Minister of Tourism | Office removed | ||
Nuri Daw al-Humaydi | Minister of Culture and Information | 2006 | ||
Mustafa Abdul Jalil | Minister of Justice | January 2007 | resigned 21 February 2011 | |
Muhammad al-Huwayj | Minister of Finance | www.mof.gov.ly | January 2007 | |
Salih Rajab al-Mismari | Minister of Public Security | 2006 | ||
Baghdadi Mahmudi | Minister of Education | www.edu.gov.ly | 2006 | fled the country 23 August 2011 |
Ali Yusuf Zikri | Minister of Industry and Mines | January 2007 | ||
Abu-Bakr al-Mansouri | Minister of Agriculture, Animal Wealth and Marine Resources | 2006 | ||
Muhammad Abu al-Ujayli Rashid | Minister of Health and Environment | January 2007 | ||
Ibrahim al-Zuruq al-Sharif | Minister of Social Affairs | January 2007 | ||
Agil Husayn Agil | Minister of Higher Education | www.higheredu.gov.ly | January 2007 | |
Muhammad Abu-Ujayl al-Mabruk | Minister of Telecommunications and Transport | www.ctt.gov.ly | January 2007 | |
Umran Ibrahim Abu-Kra'a | Minister of Electricity, Water Resources and Gas | January 2007 | ||
Muhammad Ali Al-Hwije | Minister of Finance | January 2007 | ||
M'atoog Mohamed M'atoog | Minister of Manpower, Training and Operation | www.smpt.gov.ly | ||
Mahmoud Jibril | Minister of National Planning Council | wpc.gov.ly | January 2007 | |
Abdul Rahman Gamudi | Minister of General Investment | www.gia.gov.ly www.lsm.gov.ly |
January 2007 | |
Ali Shamkh | Minister of Energy | April 2009 | ||
Shukri Ghanem | Minister of Oil | October 2009 | defected mid-May 2011,[8] previously reported (erroneously) as defecting February 2011[9] |
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Abdul Fatah Younis | Minister of Interior and Army General | ? | defected 22 February 2011 |
Notes:
1. Ministers in italics are no longer serving.
2. The GPCO was changed in 2007: Ministers of Tourism and Energy were removed.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs includes the following Assistants:
Other Secretary assistants
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