The election to choose the body to draft a new constitution had been billed as a milestone in the country's transition from the 42-year dictatorship of Moamer Kadhafi, but failed to spark enthusiasm among voters.
Political parties were not officially represented at the vote, which was organised on February 20, and only individuals were allowed to present themselves as candidates.
Early results suggested liberal candidates did well in the capital Tripoli and the eastern city of Benghazi, which has been a hotbed of Islamist unrest since Kadhafi's ouster in October 2011.
Although the commission had reorganised ballots on Wednesday in areas where voting had been prevented on February 20, unrest once again stopped the vote from going ahead.
As well as the 11 seats left vacant because of violence, another two seats reserved for the Berber minority will remain empty after the community boycotted the vote in protest at the absence of mechanisms to guarantee its cultural rights under a future constitution.
Abbar said the definitive results should be ready in two weeks, and that candidates would have a 12-day period to contest them.
The constituent assembly was due to have 60 members equally representing Libya's three regions -- Fezzan in the south, Tripolitania in the west and Cyrenaica in the east -- along the lines of the country's 1951 constitution, which was abolished by Kadhafi in 1977.
Six seats on the assembly were reserved for the minority Tuareg, Toubou and Berber communities, as well as another six for women.
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