Yearlong – COVID-19 pandemic in Libya, Libyan Crisis, Second Libyan Civil War
![[icon]](//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/1/1c/Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg/20px-Wiki_letter_w_cropped.svg.png) | This section needs expansion with: April-December. You can help by adding to it. (July 2025) |
- January 5 – The Libyan dynar (national currency) drops from being worth .746 to .225 US dollars.
- January 13 – Rival governments meet for talks aimed at unifying the national budget.[2]
- January 15 – The United Nations Security Council names Jan Kubis, a former Slovakian foreign minister, as its new envoy to Libya.[3]
- January 19 – Political rivals begin talks under United Nations auspicies to lay the groundwork for a legal foundation for elections on December 24.[4]
- January 28 – The United States calls for the immediate withdrawal of Russian and Turkish troops.[5]
- March 3
- Agence France-Presse says a confidential UN report finds Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah was elected after bribing at least three people. Dbeibah says the report is untrue.[11]
- The government says migration is not a top priority and calls upon international organizations to step up monitoring and rescue efforts.[12]
- March 7 – Parliamentarians from both sides arrive in Sirte to discuss the formation of a unity government.[13]
- March 10 – Parliament approves Abdulhamid Dbeibeh's interim cabinet 132–2.[14]
- March 31 – Two women and three migrant children drown when a boat capsizes. 77 others are rescued. 480 migrants were rescued over the weekend.[15]
- September 3 – Fighting breaks out between different factions in Tripoli as tensions rise throughout the country.[17]