data

‎The Libyan Prime Minister Abdul Hamid Dbeibah, discussed the implementation of the "Antilaqa" (Launch) project, which aims to organize and match electronic data with paper records.

This came during a meeting attended by the Head of the Administrative Control Authority, the Minister of Interior, the Director of the Civil Status Authority, the Head of the Passports Authority, the Minister of State for Cabinet Affairs, and members of the committee in charge of the project.

According to Dbeibah's Media Office, the Director of the Civil Status Authority, Tariq Al-Thaman, gave a presentation showing the stages of the project, which would end with the stage of updating the database with the new upgrade after completing the entry, matching, and compilation work, as well as the checking and correction stage. He explained that the number of offices that completed matching and scanning was 257 civil status branches across Libya.

Al-Thaman indicated that records of 1,800,000 Libyan families were printed, at a total rate of 97% of the total Libyan families, indicating that this project has not been completed since the mid-seventies of the last century, according to what was published by the Government of National Unity.

Meanwhile, Dbeibah praised the efforts of the Civil Status Authority's teams and the Attorney General's Office in following up on the project stages and implementing them, stressing the need to update the timetable for the project stages and unify the efforts of all state institutions to complete it. 

Dbeibah also called for the need to intensify work to complete this general national project, which aims to match electronic data with paper records in the Civil Status Authority's branches in the municipalities, and to prepare a sound and realistic database, which will contribute to all state procedures.