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2 May 2009 The President of the African Union
Muammar Al-Qaddafi held talks with Vice-President of
Ghana John Dramani Mahama' and the Prime Minister of
Dominica Roosevelt Skerritt on Wednesday.
The AU President was invited by Ghanaian president to
attend the centennial celebration of the hero of
African Unity Kwame Nkrumah which will coincide with
the regional gathering of Kings, Sultans, Emirs and
Chiefs of West Africa area.
PM Skerritt expressed appreciation for Libya's support
of his country and the South-South cooperation efforts
by the Leader.
The AU President hosted a dinner banquet in honor of
leaders.
Gaddafi Tries to Flex Regional Muscles
Former pariah and now Europe's cautious partner,
Libya's leader Muammar Gaddafi seems determined to
flex new-found diplomatic muscles on issues ranging
from trade to regional security, North Africa
observers say.
Elected to a one-year term to lead the 53-nation
African Union (AU) in February, Gaddafi has been
acting energetically in that role and in his capacity
as the guiding force behind the Communauté des Etats
Sahélo-Sahariens (Community of Sahel-Saharan States,
or CEN-SAD).
Promoting an idiosyncratic brand of pan-continental
leadership, Gaddafi has been welcomed back into the
European Union's (EU) good books after Libya announced
in 2003 that it was abandoning its nuclear weapons
programme.
He has made his presence felt in recent months on a
host of subject affecting relations between Europe and
Africa.
Gaddafi has become a regular visitor in European
capitals in recent years promoting, among other
measures, the creation of a 250-million euro fund to
fight poverty in the Northern African region. It was
proposed at a February CEN-SAD meeting in the Moroccan
capital of Rabat.
In February, the EU's commissioner for external
relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner, travelled to Libya
seeking to improve energy and trade relations between
the two zones.
The two governments are currently in the midst of
thorny negotiations to eventually ink trade deals
called economic partnership agreements to govern trade
in goods, services and investments. Libya's recent
acceptance to the World Trade Organisation will likely
smooth the process.
"Libya is seen increasingly as being an acceptable
partner, quite apart from its domestic behaviour,"
says George Joffe, the director of the Centre for
North African Studies at the University of Cambridge
in England.
Such high-level contacts mark a personal victory in
the quest for international acceptance by Gaddafi, who
seized power in a 1969 military coup that toppled
Libya's King Idris.
They also mark a stark turnaround from Libya's
relations with Europe and the United States over the
past two decades when a litany of terrorist incidents
were blamed by the former on the Gaddafi regime.
These included the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103
over Lockerbie, Scotland, in December 1988, which
killed 270 people and resulted in the conviction of a
former Libyan intelligence officer.
Following the bombing of a Berlin disco which
killed three people and injured over 200, the United
States launched an air assault on Libya which is
thought to have killed at least 15 people, including
Gaddafi's adopted 15-month-old daughter, Hanna
Gaddafi.
However, following the decommissioning of Libya's
nuclear program, the U.S. lifted long-standing
economic sanctions against Libya and removed the
country from its list of state-sponsors of terrorism,
steps mirrored by the EU.
The creation of CEN-SAD, initially formed in 1998
with a membership of six and having since mushroomed
to encompass 28 nations ranging from Tunisia to
Liberia, is instrumental to Gaddafi's current goals,
many believe.
"This is a project that is entirely designed to
push Libya forward as a significant African state,"
says Joffe. "Libya will provide the funding, Libya
will disperse the funding, Libya will benefit when the
projects are created."
In the last year, Gaddafi has increasingly sought
to deepen political and economic links between the AU
and CEN-SAD.
During a March visit to Guinea Bissau, for example,
Gaddafi announced that CEN-SAD would be joining the AU
in an inquiry into the assassinations of Guinea Bissau
President Joao Bernardo Vieira and the country's army
chief General Batista Tagm Na Wai.
Nevertheless, some observers see the very rapidly
growth of CEN-SAD as presenting a problem.
"CEN-SAD is virtually half the membership of the
African Union but it doesn't have any clear regional
focus like the (16 member) Economic Community Of West
African States," says Dr. J. Peter Pham, a long-time
observer of North Africa who serves as the Director of
the Nelson Institute for International and Public
Affairs at James Madison University in Virginia, U.S..
The creation of CEN-SAD is perhaps best greeted
with caution as Gaddafi's history in Africa itself,
though not as well known as some of the spectacular
acts of international terrorism, still makes for grim
reading.
The Libyan leader served as one of the key initial
backers of Charles Taylor's National Patriotic Front
of Liberia (NPFL) during Liberia's 1989-1996 civil
war, a period during which the NPFL was accused of
committing gross human rights abuses against Liberia's
civilian population.
Taylor is currently on trial for war crimes and
crimes against humanity for his role in the 1991-2002
civil war in neighbouring Sierra Leone.
In Sierra Leone itself, senior figures in the
Revolutionary United Front (RUF), the rebel faction
accused of the majority of war crimes in that
country's conflict, attended guerrilla training camps
in Libya.
Gaddafi has also been accused by critics of playing
an early role in creating the conditions that brought
about the conflict raging in Sudan's western Darfur
region - which has killed over 300,000 people - by
helping to create the Arab supremacist organisation
Tajamu al-Arabi.
This is a group that announced that its intention
was to empty the region of "African" tribes.
The International Criminal Court (ICC) issued a
warrant for Sudanese President Omar al-Bashir last
month, accusing him of crimes against humanity and war
crimes in Darfur.
At a recent AU summit in the Ethiopian capital
Addis Ababa, Gaddafi cited the ICC's indictment of al-Bashir
as indicative of a "new world terrorism" and a desire
by the European powers to "recolonise" their former
spheres of influence.
Libya's internal political dynamics have also
remained controversial.
New York-based international non-governmental
organisation Human Rights Watch enumerates various
violations in its September 2008 report "Libya: Rights
at Risk": "the continued arrests and incarceration of
political prisoners, some of them 'disappeared'; the
torture of detainees; the absence of a free press; the
ban on independent organisations; and violations of
women's and foreigners' rights."
Human Rights Watch also criticised Libya's
political system as being "dominated by one leader,
who tolerates no unsanctioned criticism of his rule".
Though on the surface more circumspect about his
ambitions than the expansionist firebrand that he
personified in years past, Gaddafi continues to
provide strident opinions at often otherwise-sedate
international gatherings.
At a June 2008 summit of North African officials in
Tripoli, he lashed out at the then-nascent Union of
the Mediterranean (initiated a month later by French
President Nicolas Sarkozy), calling the body a threat
to Arab and African unity.
Only last month, Gaddafi stormed out of an Arab
summit in Qatar after denouncing Saudi Arabia's King
Abdullah, calling him a "British product and American
ally" before proclaiming himself "the dean of the Arab
rulers" and the "king of kings of Africa". |