• Most Popular
  • Most Shared

Gaddafi says Africans must reject conditional aid

KAMPALA
Mon Mar 17, 2008 12:24pm EDT
Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi is welcomed by Uganda's President Yoweri Museveni at State House in Entebbe, 47km (29 miles) south of capital Kampala, March 16, 2008. REUTERS/James Akena

KAMPALA (Reuters) - Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi urged African governments on Monday to reject Western aid that came with conditions, saying world powers were trying to dictate democratic standards on the world's poorest continent.

World

Gaddafi is visiting Uganda to address an Afro-Arab conference of 5,000 youths that he sponsored, and to formally open a huge new mosque in the capital Kampala.

"They colonized us and now they're coming with their aid, you should reject it. Any aid with conditions should be rejected," he told cheering crowds through an interpreter.

"They give you their aid and dictate that one should adopt electoral democracy, that one must adopt multiparty systems. All these work in the West, but not in Africa."

The Libyan leader said he traveled 2,000 km (1,240 miles) across the continent by road, and that his extensive journeys had shown him how much black Africans were afflicted by poverty.

"South Africa is not independent ... it is full of whites and the blacks are living in poverty," he said.

"In Congo, the people are very poor because the white man once owned that huge country."

Gaddafi also hit out at constitutional limits on the number of terms the presidents of many African countries can serve.

He was speaking alongside Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni, a former rebel who took power in 1986 but was criticized two decades later when Uganda's parliament removed term limits that would have stopped him running for re-election in 2006.

"President Museveni here, through a revolution, liberated Uganda. How can anyone come and say that because of the constitution he should leave power?" Gaddafi asked.

"Other African leaders who are limited by constitutional term limits are unsettled and disturbed because they cannot implement revolutionary development programs," Gaddafi said.

On Wednesday, the Libyan leader is due to open a mosque built on a hill overlooking Kampala city centre.

Work on the Gaddafi National Mosque was started in the 1970s by Uganda's late dictator Idi Amin, but then stalled until 2003.

Ugandan officials say it is now the second biggest in Africa, after the Hassan II mosque in Casablanca, Morocco.

(Editing by Daniel Wallis and Mary Gabriel)



More from Reuters

A Greenpeace activist dressed as one of the "Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse" rides outside the parliament building during a brief protest in Copenhagen December 13, 2009.   REUTERS/Christian Charisius

The face of climate protest

Protesters around the globe called for an end to global warming as climate talks in Copenhagen entered their sixth day.  Video 

    In this photo reviewed by the U.S. Military, a guard leans on a fencepost as a Guantanamo detainee (L) jogs inside the exercise yard at Camp 5 detention center, at the U.S. Naval Base in Guantanamo Bay, January 21, 2009.  REUTERS/Brennan Linsley/Pool

    Life after Guantanamo

    Critics are worried that Gitmo prisoners once dubbed "enemy combatants" will be using prisons as pulpits for anti-American rhetoric once they're moved to U.S. soil.  Full Article 

    Lockheed Martin Chief Executive Robert Stevens answers a question during the Reuters Aerospace and Defense Summit in Washington December 14, 2009.  REUTERS/Molly Riley

    Lockheed eyes deals

    The future demands of cybersecurity make that sector one of many the aerospace giant sees as an acquisition target in the coming year.  Full Article