Gaddafi has his 'own way'
July 4, 2009 | Accra, Ghana | Vetting explained
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi had his own ways of conducting meetings, SA President Jacob Zuma said jokingly in Durban on Saturday. "He has his own ways of holding meetings." said Zuma jokingly at a two-day ANC provincial general council at the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Westville Campus. Describing how the African Union (AU) chairperson conducted the conference in his country this week, Zuma said "[A] quarter of the speeches during the meeting was done by him. "He forgets that there is lunch time and he forgets that people have to sleep." Zuma and other South African delegates arrived in South Africa from Libya at 07:00 on Saturday. During the AU meeting, there were reports that some delegates were complaining that Gaddafi was bulldozing his vision of forming a United States of Africa. The African Union on Friday refused to act on an international war crimes warrant for Sudan's president, at a summit that also yielded a deal on the powers of a new regional authority. The refusal to arrest Sudan President Omar al-Beshir granted a continent-wide reprieve to a leader accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity in Darfur. While the measure was backed by Libya and other nations that sympathise with Sudan, the text also voiced Africa's frustration at the UN Security Council's failure to consider a request to suspend the warrant for one year, delegates said. "They are showing to the world community that if you don't want to listen to the continent, if you don't want to take into account our proposals... if you don't want to listen to the continent, as usual, we also are going to act unilaterally," the top AU official Jean Ping said. Thirty African nations are party to the treaty that created the International Criminal Court, but even advocates of the ICC said they sensed a bias by the tribunal's prosecutor against Africa. 'AU on the side of a dictator' The United Nations says up to 300 000 people have died and 2.7 million have fled their homes since ethnic minority rebels in Darfur rose up against the Arab-dominated regime in Khartoum in February 2003. Sudan's government says 10 000 have been killed. Rights activists said the AU decision ignored the plight of the victims of the violence. "This resolution, the result of unprecedented bullying by Libya, puts the AU on the side of a dictator accused of mass murder rather than on the side of his victims," said Reed Brody, a spokesperson for Human Rights Watch. "But it cannot erase the legal obligations undertaken by the 30 African countries which have ratified the ICC treaty," he added. The summit proved contentious from the start as Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, the current AU chief hosting the summit in his hometown, extended a surprise invitation to Iran's hardline President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad to address the summit's opening on Wednesday. Marathon talks Tehran cancelled the visit at the last minute without explanation, after it became clear not all the delegates knew about or welcomed his visit. The 24 leaders at the summit then held marathon talks on Thursday night to reach a pre-dawn deal on the powers of a new AU Authority that will be tasked with co-ordinating defence, foreign relations and trade policies. Despite relentless pressure from Gaddafi to grant the Authority broad influence over policy, the summit left the new body toothless to act without an explicit mandate from the member states. Gaddafi had hoped the AU's new executive authority would mark a major step toward his dreamed "United States of Africa", but the continent's biggest economy South Africa, as well as top oil producers Nigeria and Angola, won out with their insistence on a more gradual approach to integration. "There are some small steps towards consultations and common African policy positions, but those who want to go slowly came out ahead," said one minister who participated in the talks. The 53 member states still must ratify the changes, meaning the African Union still has a long wait to see the existing AU Commission transformed into the Authority. The compromise settled the most contentious debate at the summit, which largely overshadowed talks on a raft of conflicts roiling the continent, most dramatically in Somalia, where Islamist insurgents launched an offensive against the internationally backed government nearly two months ago. More troops The African Union has 4 300 peacekeepers deployed in Somalia, its largest force on the continent. But their role is confined largely to protecting the president and ensuring that key sea and airports remain open. Somalia and five of its neighbours want the AU to deploy a total of 8 000 peacekeepers, a contingent that has already been approved but not yet manned. Nigeria, Sierra Leone and Malawi made new offers of troops, though their total contribution was not immediately clear, Ping said. The summit also called on the UN Security Council to impose a no-fly zone and a sea blockage on Eritrea, accused of arming the insurgents in Somalia.
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