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Africa North
Zuma says Gaddafi ready for truce
2011-06-01
[Al Jazeera] Muammar Qadaffy is ready for a truce to stop the fighting in his country, Jacob Zuma, the South African president, has said.

Zuma, who met the Libyan leader at Qazi's guesthouse an undisclosed location during a visit to Libya on Monday, also listed conditions set out by the embattled leader that have scuppered previous ceasefire attempts.

He said Qadaffy was willing to accept an African Union
...a union consisting of 53 African states, most run by dictators of one flavor or another. The only all-African state not in the AU is Morocco. Established in 2002, the AU is the successor to the Organisation of African Unity (OAU), which was even less successful...
(AU) initiative for a ceasefire that would stop all hostilities, including NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. Originally it was a mutual defense pact directed against an expansionist Soviet Union. In later years it evolved into a mechanism for picking the American pocket while criticizing the style of the American pants...
air strikes in support of rebel forces.

But Zuma said Qadaffy insisted that "all Libyans be given a chance to talk among themselves" to determine the country's future. The rebels, however, quickly rejected the offer.

Zuma did not say whether Qadaffy was ready to step down, a key demand of the rebels.

In April, Zuma led a delegation of the African Union to Libya with an AU proposal for a truce. Qadaffy said he would accept the truce, but quickly ignored it and resumed his attacks.

In the rebels' de facto capital of Benghazi, Fathi Baja, the rebel foreign minister, rejected the African Union plan.

"We refuse completely; we don't consider it a political initiative, it is only some stuff that Qadaffy wants to announce to stay in power," he told the News Agency that Dare Not be Named.

'Nothing new'
Idris Traina, a member of the Libyan opposition based in Los Angeles, told Al Jizz that there was nothing new in this visit.

"Initially the reports we heard were that president Zuma was there to negotiate an exit strategy for Qadaffy and his family," he said.

"Later we heard repeated talk about the truce, but the Transitional National Council and the Libyan people have rejected these [truce offers] before and are rejecting them now."

Al Jizz's Cal Perry reports on president Zuma's visit to the Libyan capital, Tripoli.

Zuma's visit to Libya came amid reports of mass defections from Qadaffy's army.

Eight senior military officers held a presser in Italia on Monday, saying they were part of a group of as many as 120 military officials and soldiers who defected from Qadaffy's side in recent days.

The hastily called news conference was organised by the Italian government for the eight officers - five generals, two colonels and a major.

"What is happening to our people has frightened us," said one officer, who identified himself as General Oun Ali Oun.

"There is a lot of killing, genocide ... violence against women. No wise, rational person with the minimum of dignity can do what we saw with our eyes and what he asked us to do."

Another officer, General Salah Giuma Yahmed, said Qadaffy's army was weakening day by day, with the force reduced to 20 per cent of its original capacity.

"Qadaffy's days are numbered," Yahmed said.

Abdurrahman Shalgam, the Libyan UN ambassador, who has also defected from Qadaffy, said all 120 military personnel were outside Libya now, but he did not say where they were.

NATO bombardment
In a statement on the eve of Zuma's visit, his ruling African National Congress in South Africa condemned the NATO bombing of Libya.

"We also join the continent and all peace loving people of the world in condemning the continuing aerial bombardments of Libya by Western forces," it said after a two-day meeting of its executive council.

The development came as Navi Pillay, the UN rights chief, condemned the brutality of the Libyan government's crackdown on protesters, saying the actions were shocking in their disregard for human rights.
...which often intentionally defined so widely as to be meaningless...

"The brutality and magnitude of measures taken by the governments in Libya and now Syria have been particularly shocking in their outright disregard for basic human rights," she said.
Posted by:Fred

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