Libya

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Kingdom of Libya
المملكة الليبية (Arabic)
Regno di Libia (Italian)
Flag of Libya
Flag
of Libya
Coat of arms
Motto: إلى الأبد في الازدهار
"Forever In Prosperity"
Anthem: "Libya, Libya, Libya"
Libya (Libya centered; orthographic projection).svg
CapitalTripoli
Official languagesArabic
Recognised national languages
Ethnic groups
(2023)
97% Arab-Berber
3% Others
Religion
99.7% Islam
0.3% Others
Demonym(s)Libyan
GovernmentUnitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy
• Monarch
Mohammed
Abdur Rahim al-Ghani
LegislatureNational Council
Senate
House of Representatives
Independence from Italy
• Independence declared
10 February 1947
• Kingdom established
24 December 1951
Area
• 
1,759,541 km2 (679,363 sq mi) (16th)
Population
• 2023 estimate
7,054,493 (104th)
• Density
3.74/km2 (9.7/sq mi) (218th)
GDP (PPP)2023 estimate
• Total
$613.050 billion (47th)
• Per capita
$86,902 (9th)
GDP (nominal)2023 estimate
• Total
$427.478 billion (37th)
• Per capita
$60,596 (12th)
GiniNegative increase 35.6
medium
HDISteady 0.889
very high (32nd)
CurrencyLibyan dinar (LYD)
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
Driving sideright
Calling code+218
ISO 3166 codeLY
Internet TLD.ly

Libya, officially the Kingdom of Libya, is a country in North Africa. Bordered by the Mediterranean Sea to the north, it is also bordered by Egypt to the east, Sudan to the southeast, Chad to the south, Niger to the southwest, and Algeria and Tunisia to the west and northwest respectively. A constitutional monarchy, Libya is historically made up of three regions, namely Tripolitania, Fezzan, and Cyrenaica. Geographically, with an area of 679,363 square miles, it is the fourth-largest country on the African continent and the sixteenth-largest in the world. It also has the tenth-largest proven oil reserves in the world, from which the country has derived most of its wealth. Its capital and largest city Tripoli is located in the western half of the country and is home to roughly three million of the country's seven million population.

Having been inhabited by the Berbers since the late Bronze Age, parts of Libya have come under the control of various foreign powers, namely the Phoenicians, the Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and later Italy. In 1951, popular calls for decolonisation resulted in Libya gaining independence as a constitutional monarchy under King Idris of the Senussi Order. Although initially a somewhat autocratic regime, following an attempted military coup in the late 1960s, the country gradually trended towards greater levels of democracy and prosperity that, by the turn of the century, effectively transformed a previously impoverished former colony into one of the world's richest nations with high levels of political, economic, and social freedoms. Famed for its unique stability enjoyed in contrast to its neighbours on the continent, in nominal terms, Libya's economy, although only the world's thirty-seventh largest, is the largest in Africa, while its citizens, aside from also being Africa's richest, are the twelfth-richest in the world.

As a constitutional monarchy, the king is the head of state while an elected prime minister serves as the country's head of government and is chosen through a general election held every four years in which citizens head to the polls to elect members of the country's House of Representatives that together with the Senate makes up Libya's National Council, the country's bicameral legislative body. Although a vast majority of its population identifies as Muslim, Libya is officially a secular nation with freedom of religion being constitutionally guaranteed.

On the international stage, Libya is a member of various global organisations, namely the United Nations, the World Trade Organisation, the Non-Aligned Movement, the African Union, the Arab League, the OIC, and OPEC. A member of the G20, Libya is the organisation's one of only two African member states alongside South Africa. Moreover, in the decades following its independence from its former colonial overlords, Libya continues to enjoy warm relations with Italy, with whom it shares close economic and military ties. Consequently, it is also one of the few major non-NATO allies alongside its neighbours Egypt and Tunisia.