Businessman Ahmed Maiteeq was sworn in as Libya’s new Prime Minister yesterday after chaotic voting, with several lawmakers challenging an appointment seen by analysts as unlikely to ease the oil producer’s political turmoil.

Officials gave contradicting versions of the parliamentary election outcome, with a deputy speaker initially saying Maiteeq had failed to obtain the necessary quorum even though he emerged as frontrunner in several prior votes.

Meanwhile, however, second deputy speaker Saleh Makhzoun later said he had won the necessary support and asked him to form a new government within two weeks.

“Ahmed Maiteeq is officially the new Prime Minister,” Makhzoun told a televised session interrupted by shouts from lawmakers challenging his win.

Analysts expect Maiteeq to struggle to make headway as the Libyan government and Parliament are unable to impose authority on a country awash with arms and militias, both a legacy from the Nato-backed 2011 uprising which toppled Muammar Gaddafi.

Since the civil war that ended Gaddafi’s one-man rule, Libya’s nascent democracy has struggled, with its Parliament para­lysed by rivalries and brigades of heavily-armed former rebels challenging the new state.

The Premier’s post became vacant after Prime Minister Abdullah al-Thinni resigned three weeks ago, citing an attack by gunmen on his family just a month into his term.

The vote to appoint Maiteeq as the Prime Minister was totally invalid

Parliament began voting on his successor last Wednesday, but that session was postponed after gunmen linked to a defeated candidate stormed the building and wounded several people.

Lawmakers resumed voting yesterday in a frequently interrupted session which was marked by confusion over the number of votes cast for Maiteeq. Some questioned the legitimacy of his election.

“The vote... to appoint him as the Prime Minister was totally invalid,” said lawmaker Zainab Haroun Al-Targi.

Thinni’s short-lived tenure followed that of Ali Zeidan who fled the country after he was fired by deputies over his failure to stop attempts by rebels in the volatile east to sell oil independently of Tripoli’s government.

Libya’s assembly is deadlocked between Islamists, tribes and nationalists, as the country’s fledgling army tries to assert itself against unruly ex-rebels, tribal groups and Islamist militants. In February, it agreed to hold early elections to assuage Libyans frustrated at political chaos nearly three years after the fall of Gaddafi.

Assembly president Nouri Abu Sahmain was absent from the vote. He disappeared from public view since the attorney general launched an investigation into a leaked video showing him being questioned over a late-night visit by two women to his house.

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