Published: 4:51PM Thursday September 24, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersLibyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, in his first ever address to the UN, accused the veto-wielding powers of the Security Council of betraying the principles of the UN charter
Muammar Gaddafi, in his first address to the United Nations in
40 years as Libya's autocratic ruler, accused major powers on the
Security Council of betraying the principles of the UN
charter.
"The preamble (of the charter) says all nations are equal whether
they are small or big," Gaddafi said in a long, rambling speech
during which he chastised his audience for falling asleep.
After reading from a copy of the UN charter, Gaddafi condemned the
veto power held by five permanent of the council, at one point
referring to it as the terror council.
Speaking through an interpreter, he said: "The veto is against
the charter, we do not accept it and we do not acknowledge
it."
Clad in a copper-coloured robe with an emblem of Africa pinned over
his chest, the Libyan leader dropped his paperback copy of the
charter on the podium several times before tossing it over his
shoulder.
Gaddafi, who touched on subjects ranging from the assassination of
US President John F Kennedy, the US invasion of Grenada and free
medicine for the world's children, spoke for one hour and 35
minutes.
It was not a record-breaker - in 1960 Cuba's Fidel Castro blasted
US imperialism for about four hours - but it threw out the UN's
scheduling on a day when many leaders were down to speak.
Tells delegates to wake up
A number of delegates left the hall and at one point the Libyan
leader complained about the tired appearance of the audience.
"Please can I have your attention," he said. "All of you are
tired, having jet lag. ... You are tired. All of you are
asleep."
Many countries have been upset by Libya's warm public reception for
a Libyan official convicted of involvement in the 1988 Lockerbie
bombing attack who was released by Scotland last month on health
grounds.
In Washington, as Gaddafi was speaking, the US Senate approved a
resolution condemning the lavish welcome home ceremony and demanded
that Libya apologize.
That was about the only issue Gaddafi did not touch on in his
speech.
His presence prompted some protests and wide interest in New
York.
He tried unsuccessful to get permission to pitch a Bedouin tent
he likes to stay in Central Park and in two other sites near New
York City.
The United States, Britain, France, Russia and China are permanent
veto-wielding members of the Security Council, the most powerful
body within the United Nations.
Libya has a temporary council seat and will be on the 15-nation
panel until the end of this year.
"Veto power should be annulled," Gaddafi said.
"The Security Council did not provide us with security but with
terror and sanctions," he told leaders gathered for the opening day
of the 192-nation General Assembly.
Praise for Obama
Gaddafi, who spoke just after US President Barack Obama , said the
fact that"65 wars have broken out since the UN was established more
than 60 years ago proved its founding principles had been
betrayed.
"The election of Obama is the beginning of change," he said and
applauded Obama's stated commitment to nuclear disarmament.
Other US presidents, he said, had been terrorizing his
region.
The United States began lifting its sanctions and normalizing
relations with Tripoli after Gaddafi said he was abandoning Libya's
nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs in December
2003.
The Libyan leader, who has long been one of the harshest critics of
Israel in the Middle East, did not lash out at the Jewish
state.
Instead, he reiterated his call for a single state in which Jews
and Palestinians would live together.
"The solution is a democratic state without religious fanaticism,"
he said. "Everybody should live in peace. Isratine, Isratine is the
solution."
Although he dismissed the Security Council as illegitimate,
Gaddafi, who currently chairs the African Union, reiterated
Africa's call for a permanent council seat.
He also said that Africa deserved compensation totalling $US7.77
trillion from its past colonial masters for damages sustained
during the colonial period.
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