Military Wiki
The Libyan Freedom and Democracy Campaign
Founded February 2011
Ideology Separation of Church and State
UN control of Libya until elections
Establishment of Truth and reconciliation commission for Libya
Political parties
Elections
  • Support for the National Transitional Council as a useful expedient to help the transition to Democracy, but noting that it does not have legal legitimacy.[1]
  • The transition to democracy in Libya to be overseen by a United Nations commission similar to the Adriaan Pelt commission at the end of World War II which oversaw the independence of Libya[2]
  • Deployment of UN peacekeeping forces
  • The establishment of a commission similar to the Truth and reconciliation commission in South Africa
  • The Separation of Church and State, with Freedom of conscience as the best way to defeat radical Islam and Al Qaida[3]

The campaign is currently working with many think tanks such as the club of Madrid, the Gorbachev Foundation and The Westminster Foundation for Democracy, to achieve its aims.

On 14 July 2011, the Libyan Freedom and Democracy Campaign established the Democratic Party (Libya)

References[]

External links[]

All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at Libyan Freedom and Democracy Campaign and the edit history here.