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Mugabe
says Gaddafi's death as tragic as US envoy's
(Reuters)
- Zimbabwean President Robert Mugabe said on Wednesday the death of Libyan
leader Muammar Gaddafi was as tragic as that of U.S. Ambassador to Libya
Christopher Stevens, as he delivered a scathing critique of U.S., U.N. and
NATO actions.
Speaking
firmly, if occasionally stumbling over words, the 88-year-old president accused
the United States of
"rushing to suck oil from Iraq"
when it invaded the country in 2003 on the erroneous grounds that it possessed
weapons of mass destruction.
He
said the U.N. Security Council had allowed itself to be "abused" last
year by authorizing "all necessary measures" - diplomatic code for
military intervention - to protect civilians in Libya in a NATO operation that
eventually toppled Gaddafi's government and led to his death at the hands of
rebels.
Speaking
with deliberate irony, Mugabe opened an address to the U.N. General Assembly by
praising as "most glowing and most moving" a speech by U.S. President
Barack Obama on Tuesday in which he rued Stevens' death.
Stevens
and three other Americans were killed during what Washington
has called a "terrorist" attack on the U.S.
mission in Benghazi
on September 11. The assault forced the evacuation of U.S. personnel
from the eastern city that was the hub for the Libyan rebel movement.
"I
am sure we were all moved, we all agree, that it was a tragic death indeed and
we condemn it," said Mugabe, who has ruled Zimbabwe since independence
from Britain in 1980 and is among Africa's longest-serving leaders.
"As
we in spirit join the United States
in condemning that death, shall the United States
also join us in condemning that barbaric death of the head of state of Libya -
Gaddafi? It was a loss, a great loss, to Africa, a tragic loss to Africa."
'A
HUNT, A BRUTAL HUNT'
The
Zimbabwean accused the United
States and North Atlantic Treaty
Organization, the 28-member Western security alliance whose air strikes helped
Libyan rebels defeat Gaddafi's forces, of acting under false pretenses.
"The
mission was strictly to protect civilians, but it turned out that there was a
hunt, a brutal hunt, of Gaddafi and his family," Mugabe said. "In a
very dishonest manner we saw ... Chapter 7 being used now as a weapon to rout a
whole family."
Chapter
7 of the United Nations Charter allows the U.N. Security Council to authorize
actions ranging from diplomatic and economic sanctions to military
intervention.
"Bombs
were ... thrown about in a callous manner and quite a good many civilians died.
Was that the protection that they had sought under Chapter 7 of the Charter?
"So
the death of Gaddafi must be seen in the same tragic manner as the death of
Chris Stevens. We condemn both of them."
Mugabe,
a long-standing critic of the West, is himself widely criticized for turning
what was once one of Africa's strongest
economies into a basket case and has been accused of hanging on to power
through vote-rigging.
Other
speakers at the U.N. General Assembly on Wednesday - notably Bolivia's leftist president, Evo Morales, and
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad - also criticized the United States
for what they see as economic and political bullying.
A
U.S.
official had no immediate comment on Mugabe's remarks.
The
Zimbabwean leader appeared to be in reasonable health despite questions about
his wellbeing sparked by Zimbabwean media reports that he has traveled to
Singapore eight times in the past year to seek medical attention.
He
walked in an almost jaunty manner to and from the lectern in the General
Assembly hall, where he read his speech from a written text.
Reuters
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