The Fall Of
Gazafi & The Eritrean-Libyan Relations (Part II)
Published at
awate.com on March 16, 2011
Written by: Dr. Mohammed Kheir
If one were to re-compose an old Eritrean Tigrinya song to
describe how many times the Eritrean President has visited Libya in the last
decade, one of the verses would read like this: ‘Tezewery nefarit
tezewereyeTribolin-Asmaran kuynu mezawereye’ (Fly Airplane, fly, the Asmara
Tripoli journey has become an entertainment).
Part I focused on the pre-liberation Libyan Eritrean
relations. Though the Eritrean president has traveled to Libya many times, the
Libyan leader has visited Eritrea only once. In an interview the Eritrean
president conducted with Libyan media in Asmara on January 5, 2011, he
described the relationship as special and historical. He also stated that he visited Libya when the
UN sanctions were imposed on that country and stressed the strong opposition
Libya demonstrated when similar sanctions were imposed on Eritrea.
President Isaias’ last reported trip to Libya was about 5
months ago (9- 12 October 2010). Both leaders met in N’djamena on 21st July and
then in Libya on the 23rd of the same month. He visited Libya on May 6 and held
a telephone conversation with the ‘leader of the Great Arab Socialist
Jamahiriya’ on May 14. These are just the reported meetings in 2010. He has
been traveling there often to ask for aid in terms of cash or oil or for
political consultations for their joint conspiracies in different parts of
Africa. It is believed that the Libyan dictator is one of those who finances
Eritrea’s involvement in Somalia.
One of the beggars who was rounded up in Asmara when the
regime was ‘cleansing the city’ shortly after independence is reported to have
challenged his captors by saying, “Why do you stop us from begging while
President Isaias is freely traveling from one country to another to beg for
money.”
Libya has also its version of Dr. Gideon Abay Asmerom
(professors at the service of dictators). He has Dr. Yusuf Shakir who has a daily program called ‘Ashem al
Watan’ (hope of the nation) on Jamahiriya TV. In one of his recent programs,
speaking on the disaster of Japan, he said, ‘Oh Al mighty God, you see it was
not even hours after Japan announced freezing the assets of Gazafi (he did not
even mention Libya) that the catastrophe followed’. He is more spiritual than
our professor as he claims that saints speak to him in his dreams, that the
regime in Libya will come out of this stronger. Both leaders have their
‘tribes’ of supporters. While demonstrators in the Arab world shout ‘Alshaab
yriid isgatt al raeis’ (people want to topple the president/regime), the Gazafi
thugs shout ‘Al shaab yriid Muaamer al agid’ (people want Muaamer the colonel),
and ‘Allah, Muaamer and Libya only’. Our own thugs demonstrate in Europe with
the slogan ‘Nihna nsu, nsu nhna’ (we are him and he is us), in support our
Isaias.
Gazafi had long fallen with the Arab countries after no one
seemed to be interested in his grand ideas of Arab unity that revolved around
him and started looking towards Africa to pursue his ideas of unity. He was
isolated internationally after the UN sanctions were imposed on Libya in 1992/1993
which were suspended in 1999 and lifted in 2003. Few leaders dared visit Libya during that
period. It was during such circumstances that Isaias made his first visit to
Libya. He arrived in Tripoli on the 3rd of February 1998 (about three months before
the border war with Ethiopia). Due to the air embargo on Libya then, Isaias made a stop-over in Jerba, Tunisia,
before he traveled by road to Tripoli. Diplomatic relations between the two
countries were established during that visit. That trip had paid off and he has
since been traveling regularly to Libya. Relations between the two countries
improved dramatically after the Eritrean-Ethiopian war. Eritrea became
increasingly isolated in Africa due to the erroneous policies it pursued. Libya
had more sympathy to Eritrea during the border war with Ethiopia. It has long
called for the OAU to be moved from Addis to Tripoli.
In its pursuit of grandeur in Africa the Libyan regime
established the Community of Sahel-Saharan States (CEN SAD) on the February 4,
1998, in Tripoli. The founding summit was attended by Gazafi and the heads of
States of Mali, Chad, Niger, Sudan and a representative of the President of
Burkina Faso. Relations between the two countries became even more closer after
Eritrea joined the organization in April 1999. The CEN SAD, with 23 member
countries (about 43% of the whole members of the African Union) has become a
mini African Union.
The current uprising in Libya has revealed that some Libyans
live in slums in abject poverty (GDP estimated at $ 89 billion) while Gazafi
spends billions to achieve greatness, to finance terrorist activities and to go
away with his crimes by paying heavy compensations as was the case in the
Lockerbie incident. He spent lavishly in Africa. It is stated “Libyan government in August 2008, availed
massive funds to fly kings, sultans, princes, sheiks and mayors of Africa to
Libya, spending time in the country’s top hotels and eating what they want,
when they want. The forum met in Tripoli between September 7 and 9 to ratify
and affirm an already-drawn-up document, and declared Gaddafi as ‘King of Kings
of Africa’”.
Charles Onyango-Obbo recently wrote in the East African
noting:
Gaddafi’s Libya supplied 15 per cent of the African Union’s
entire budget and pays the annual subscription fee of small, poor African
states. In the past decade, he has donated billions of dollars in aid and gifts
to African causes and countries, and he established a $1.5 billion African
fund. Gaddafi can be catholic in his support, backing all sides to conflicts;
he was in the DR Congo, supported rebels in Liberia and Sierra Leone, and of
course Chad.
The Libyan dictatorial regime has been able to buy African
votes to assume a non-permanent seat on the UN Security Council in 2008 and
paradoxically a membership in the UN Human Rights Council from which it is
suspended at present.
So it is not strange that AU seems to be in support of the
Libyan regime. The Libyan Broadcasting Corporation reports regularly that
President Teodoro Obiang Ngeuma of Equatorial Guinea, a dictator himself who
has been in power since 1978, who is also the current African Union Chairman
has regular contacts with Gazafi. A journalist in the country was suspended recently over a Libya mention.
When Equatorial Guinea’s Dictator Teodoro Obiang Nguema was elected as the
chairman of the African Union (AU) in January, Afrol News editor’s comment
read “This is the darkest day in the
AU’s history.”
Gazafi visited Eritrea in February (7-9) in 2003 where he
was received in Massawa and drove to Asmara where thousands of Eritreans were
made to line up on the road to greet him, something very much to his taste.
Following that visit Eritrean asylum seekers using Libya as transit to Europe
came under increasing pressure and mistreatment with the Eritrean embassy
having direct access to them. Some 76 Eritreans were forcibly returned to
Eritrea in August the same year. Four of the deportees were able to highjack
the plane and land in Khartoum.
There are many
reports on human rights abuses of Eritreans and other asylum seekers in Libya.
One such report by Human Rights Watch describes the situation before the last
uprising. Things has gone much worse during the current uprising which has been
highlighted in the many appeals made on the behalf of the African refugees in
Libya. I am told that it was the late
Omer Burj who saved Eritreans in Libya in the 1980s using his close relations
to Abdulsalam Jelud. It does not seem we have another Burj this time. Libya has
not signed the 1951 Refugee Convention, and its 1967 Protocol and has no asylum
law or procedures which makes matters worse.
Though Gazafi’s philosophy emanates from the Green Book
which was translated to Tigrinya in 2006 (probably done to get money from
Gazafi and later shelved so no one can read it), there are many similarities
between the two dictators. Paranoia,
equating the country with one’s self, denial of the truth, blaming others,
presenting their regimes as the best in the world, refusing to be ruled by a
constitution or to be elected and brutality against their opponents, are some
of their shared characteristics. During the current crisis, the Libyan dictator
said, “All my people love me, there were no demonstrations against me,” and
ours says regularly that there is no opposition in Eritrea, and there are no
political prisoners. Both have been in power for too long, Gazafi since 1969
and Isaias since 1970.
Isaias has been the
indisputable leader since he split from the ELF, first for Selfi Netzanet and
later for the EPLF until independence. Since 1991 he runs the country as a
president, though unelected. Both are feared. Gazafi is referred to as the
‘leader’ and Isiaias as Nsu ‘he’ or ‘the man’. Both keep journalists waiting
for many hours. Isaias with the farmer,
‘kebessa’ mentality, is however, more shrewd and careful in expressing his
grandness than the outspoken Gazafi, the ‘nomad’ who speaks his mind. The
Libyan dictator feels he has created modern Libya and ours believes he has
created the State of Eritrea. When he leaves, Gazafi will be missed for his
fancy dresses, his large entourage of female bodyguards, his lengthy speeches
and bizarre behavior. I can not imagine that there would be anything that one
misses Isaias for.
We do not know yet how and when the Libyan regime will fall
and how much time it will buy by using excessive force, and its financial
resources, but one thing is very clear: Qazafi & family regime in Libya has
lost its moral legitimacy and will not be able to rule the Libyans for too
long. The ‘zenga’ speech of the leader has become a mockery in the Internet. A
democratic Libya will be in the interest of all peace loving people in the
world. The fall of the Libyan regime will not only end the suffering of the
Libyan people, but also deprive the dictatorial regime in Eritrea of one of its
closest allies in the world, thus bringing its end much closer.
Moh.kheir33@hotmail.com
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