Libya’s central bank, long split into two branches due to war, took delivery of a long-awaited audit on Thursday in a key step towards reunifying the country’s divided institutions. The bank, which manages the North African country’s vast oil revenues, had been severed in 2014 as the complex civil war gave rise to rival administrations in the east and west. Last year, even ahead of an October ceasefire on the ground, consultancy Deloitte International was charged with auditing the two branches ahead of reunification, as part of a United Nations-led roadmap. On Thursday, UN envoy Jan Kubic presented the audit to Libya’s interim Prime Minister Abdulhamid Dbeibah at a ceremony in Tripoli.