Since the 2011 civil war, much of eastern Libya has been controlled by
Khalifa Haftar. In the rest of the country, power has remained divided between the House of Representatives and the High Council of State. Appointing officials requires the consent of both, which is extremely hard to procure. In September 2024, the
United Nations Support Mission in Libya mediated talks between the House of Representatives and the High Council of State on the appointment of new leadership at the Central Bank. The previous governor, Abdel Fattah Ghafar, had been rejected by both legislative bodies. On 26 September, the United Nations announced that Belqasem had been appointed governor, with Maree Moftah al-Baraasi as his Deputy. He was installed on 3 October. Belqasem is the first CBL governor to be approved by Libya's legislatures since the civil war. Previous governors, including his predecessor, had been appointed only by the Presidential Council, a body that functions of an
executive branch, and thus had often been in constant disagreement with the legislatures which had never approved their nomination. Therefore, his appointment was widely speculated as a step towards stability in the country. == References ==