Tuesday, December 12, 2006

Gaddafi: Oil behind Darfur crisis


I didn't even know the Sudan had oil. I've been hoping for a unified Africa for some time but this is the first time I've heard Gaddafi of all people making the sme overtures. As much as I take precious little Arab leaders say seriously, when it comes to oil and Western interests, Gaddafi is probably right. I've said as much time and time again that I believe the West is wating for the Africans to completely kill themselves so they can continue to rape that continent unimpeded and with pre-independence impunity. I feel rather icky agreeing with this terrorist but the man has a point. The West has not done nearly enough in earnest to help Africa build an infrastructure and a society worthy of the modern world. Don't get me wrong, we've given that place untold billions and the natives have done a great job of squandering and stealing a sizable portion of if, not to mention hanging on to old rivalries and hatreds that make gang violence in America among blacks look like a sissy slap fight. At any rate, though I'm sure the UN really does mean well in trying to send peacekeepers into Darfur and Khatoum, the reality may be that the only reason anyone is even bothering to try and stop the genocide is in fact the oil and not the belief that wholesale genocide of Africans is wrong...Or maybe Gaddafi and I are just really cynical.

Muammar Gaddafi has accused the West of trying to grab Sudan's oil wealth with its plan to send UN troops to Darfur.

The Libyan president, a mediator in several African wars, was echoing Sudanese criticisms of the proposed deployment as a Western attempt at colonisation.

Gaddafi also urged the Khartoum government to reject the proposal.

"Western countries and America are not busying themselves out of sympathy for the Sudanese people or for Africa but for oil and for the return of colonialism to the African continent," he said.

Gaddafi's opinions are listened to in Africa because of his advocacy of African unity and development.

Gaddafi was speaking at a ceremony in Tripoli on Sunday attended by Sudanese government officials and a faction of the Sudan Liberation Army rebels to celebrate their signing on Saturday of an agreement aimed at bringing peace to Darfur.

"To be occupied by the Sudanese army is better than to be occupied by UN forces, and the biggest disaster is if the Atlantic army came and positioned itself in Sudan ," he said, referring to Western troops.

The UN and the African Union (AU) have been pressing Sudan to accept a UN-led peacekeeping force in Darfur to halt three years of violence that has killed tens of thousands of people.

Crisis genesis

Rebels took up arms in early 2003 accusing Sudan 's government of marginalising the remote west. Khartoum mobilised militias to quell the revolt. Those militias stand accused of atrocities against civilians being investigated by the International Criminal Court.

Gaddafi is a longstanding opponent of the International Criminal Court in the Hague , which he has dismissed as a dispenser of victors' and colonisers' justice.

He accused the West of wishing to defeat his plan to form a single African federal government in a so-called United States of Africa.

"The West exploits tribalism, sectarianism and (skin) colour to feed war, which leads to backwardness and Western intervention in a number of countries," he said.

"All the conflicts in Africa are caused by colonialism, which does not want the rise of the United States of Africa and works for division and interference and for military coups."

No comments: