ROME (Reuters) - Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, addressing Italians in a historic Rome square, embarrassed his hosts on Thursday by saying he would abolish political parties and give Italians direct power if it were up to him.
"There would be no right, left or centre. The party system is the abortion of democracy," Gaddafi said in a sunset address in the famous Campidoglio square designed by Michelangelo atop Capitoline hill.
"I would abolish political parties so as to give power to the people," said the idiosyncratic Gaddafi, while some members of the crowd held up pictures of the Libyan leader and banners welcoming him.
His angry host, right-wing Rome mayor Gianni Alemanno -- who had praised the Libyan leader an hour earlier -- told reporters Gaddafi's discourse on political parties was "unacceptable" and that "we don't accept lessons on democracy from anyone."
Gaddafi also praised Italy for condemning fascism after the colonial period. Alemanno, standing beside him, was once the youth leader of a neo-fascist party and sparked controversy last year by refusing to label fascism as evil.
Earlier in the day Gaddafi, making his first visit to the former colonial power, faced protests by students over his human rights record and over a bilateral agreement for Italy to send back boatloads of African migrants crossing the Mediterranean.
The students tried to stop him giving a lecture at a Rome university, hurling paint and scuffling with police.
He told the students terrorism was "the residue of colonialism".
"Terrorism is to be condemned and most victims (of terrorism) are innocent and unarmed," Gaddafi said. But the world community had to look at the root causes of terrorism, such as injustice, he added.
The North African nation, once a pariah accused of sponsoring terrorism, has seen a thaw in its relations with the West since Gaddafi promised to give up the quest for weapons of mass destruction. International sanctions were lifted in 2003.
Italy, which last year apologised for Italian atrocities during its 1911-1943 colonial rule, is at the forefront of the diplomatic thaw and now gets a quarter of its oil from Libya, and more recently Libyan capital injections into Italian firms.
But Gaddafi retains a defiant tone, arriving on Wednesday in Rome with a picture pinned to his uniform of Omar al-Mukhtar, a resistance hero hanged by Italian occupiers in 1931.
Italian television on Thursday screened "Lion of the Desert", a 1981 film about al-Mukhtar which was banned in Italy until now.
Gaddafi, who as current chairman of the Africa Union will attend a G8 summit in Italy next month with U.S. President Barack Obama, also criticised the U.S-led war in Iraq during a speech earlier on Thursday to the Italian senate.
"Iraq was a fortress against terrorism, with Saddam Hussein al Qaeda could not get in, but now thanks to the United States it is an open arena and this benefits al Qaeda," he said.
He also compared the U.S. air strike on Tripoli in 1986, in which one of his daughters was killed, to an al Qaeda attack.
"What difference is there between the American attack on our homes in 1986 and bin Laden's terrorist actions?" he asked. "If bin Laden has no state and is an outlaw, America is a state with international rules."
Arguing that the world should have room for "regimes of all kinds" including "revolutionary" Libya, he asked: "What's wrong with North Korea wanting to be communist? Or Afghanistan being in the hands of the mullahs? Is not the Vatican a respectable theocratic state with embassies all over the world?"
Some senators from the opposition centre-left managed to get Gaddafi blocked from speaking in the main chamber, forcing the speech to take place in a nearby annexe.
Gaddafi also complained that the world had not rewarded Libya for giving up its ambition of owning weapons of mass destruction.
"We cannot accept living in the shadow of intercontinental missiles and nuclear weapons, which is why we decided to change route," he told the senators.
"We had hoped Libya would be an example to other countries," Gaddafi said. "But we have not been rewarded by the world".
On Wednesday, his host Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi said Libya agreed to supply more oil to Italy and the head of Libya's sovereign wealth fund said he was eyeing investments in Italian electricity and infrastructure companies and joint ventures with Italy in Libya.
(Additional reporting by Deepa Babington)
2 comments:
This statement by Gaddafi the Chairman of Africa Union shows how far away Africa still is when it comes to democracy, rule of law, respect for human rights and development.
This comment by Gaddafi smash the face of democracy itself. Why would he abolish democracy and give the people direct power? What is direct power is it the human rights abuse, torture, illegal arrests and detention or Is it the corruption, scant accountability, dictatorship, media censorship, intimidation and the complete disregard for human rights and human values? Is this what he calls people power? Qaddafi is a disgrace to Africa. He represents only a minority in Africa who know nothing except dictatorship, opulence and corruption. How could this man be made the Chairman of the African Union if majority of the members do not think and act like him? I know Italy is mad about him and has falling in love with him because of the oil in his closed country.
The people of Libya and indeed all of Africa will be better off without people like him.
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