The Italian colonial authorities negotiated with al-Baruni and other chiefs and published 1 June 1919 a Colonial Statute for Tripolitania in which the colonial administration would give native Tripolitanians rights to
Italian citizenship, recognise
Islamic law as the
civil law of the colony and provide that the colony would be governed by an Italian governor advised by a ten-member council with eight of those members being elected. At first, the Tripolitanian leaders were satisfied with the statute officially and dissolved the republic on July 12, but when
Vicenzo Garioni, the colonial governor who had negotiated with the rebel leaders, was recalled to Italy in mid-August and the new governor,
Vittorio Menzinger did not seem to apply the statute, the former rebel leaders formed the
National Party of Islam (
Hizb al-Islam al-Watani) to exert pressure on the Italians. The main leaders of the Party were 'Azzam, al-Qarqani and al-Gharyani. However, the elections for the council had not occurred by November and so the main leaders and chiefs of Tripolitania declared and re-established the republic on November in Misrata, just four months after it had been dissolved, and the establishment of a governing body called the Reform Committee. In 1920, delegates from occupied and free zones met in 'Aziziya at a National Congress. Claiming to represent the "Tripolitanian Nation". they called for the withdrawal of the Italian forces. The next appointed governors,
Luigi Mercatelli and
Giuseppe Volpi, turned to the military power to subjugate the region. The division among the insurgents was increasing, and, after the death of al-Suwaylih in August 1920 by political opponents, the rebels started to fracture, and the Republic, still fighting the Italians, fell into civil war. By early 1922, the Tripolitanians were desperate; met with Senussi delegate, and offered Idris, the leader of the Senussi and the Emir of Cyrenaica to be Emir of Tripolitania. Idris's acceptance, as the nationalists understood, would draw a sharp Italian disapproval and be the signal for the resumption of open warfare. War with Italy, in any event, appeared to be likely sooner or later. For several months, Idris pondered the nationalist appeal. For whatever reason, perhaps to further the cause of total independence or perhaps out of a sense of religious obligation to resist the infidel, Idris accepted the emirate of all of Libya in November and then, to avoid capture by the Italians, fled to Egypt, where he continued to guide the Sanusi Order. By 1923, Italian control was effective in the territories of the Republic, which had not ceased to exist, but still was confined to the Tripolitanian and outer Cyrenaican areas. The rest of the country, still in the hands of the Senussi-led rebels, had yet to be conquered and
was pacified only later. ==Organs==