Qaraytali added that the "Correction of the Path” “must figure on the list of priorities constituting the pillars to establish a new Libya. Consequently, the road will be paved for more developmental operations in the near future. One of the priorities of correcting the path is actually defining this path clearly, such that it relentlessly fights corruption on all official levels.”
Libyan political activist and writer Abdel Qader Bou Hadma, said: “After two years, the revolution is now standing at the same crossroads that caused the uprising against Gadhafi. The revolution hasn’t completed its role, since all that has happened has resulted in this tangled-up Libyan situation.” Hadma also shed light on “the setting of the current political Libyan scene, which resembles Gadhafi’s previous maneuvers in some ways and might be an extension of the ideas and ambitions of the former leader and guide.”
In an interview with Al-Hayat, Hadma said, “This scene has nothing to do with what Libya really wants, nor with the change it is seeking. In the absence of alternatives, no subsequent possible mechanisms and results have been presented. The wisest thing would be to return to the interpretation of the previous Libyan experience, which resulted in the declaration of an independent state, in cooperation with the international organizations. This could protect Libya from distorted judgments summarized by the temporary constitutional declaration that has led to a series of setbacks and initiated the current Libyan crisis, which has created a useless system with no substance.”
Hadma confirmed that the issue of the possession of weapons is a "culture that emerged to prove each party’s existence and create new powers that are not linked to the notion of the establishment of a country. The resolution of the issue of arms calls for the involvement of the whole world that helped abolish Gadhafi's difficult case." This was, of course, relative to the regional and global interests that Libya represents.
It seems that the turbidity of the scene and the diversity of opinions regarding the real demands of the Libyan people and the leaders, militias and politicians controlling it make it harder to predict the outcome of the situation on Feb. 15. Informed sources confirmed to Al-Hayat that the supporters of the former regime, locally and internationally, have prepared themselves to exploit the situation, while Islamic forces are all set to impose their presence, amid the public persistence in "correcting the path."