Why Gadaffi
boycotted The AU Summit Opening
Samuel Dowuona, ACCRA, Ghanadot
After making so much noise about ensuring “African
Government Now” and also making a show of his travel through
the borders of several African Union (AU) member states by
road - from Libya to Accra, Libyan Leader Muamar Gadaffi was
conspicuously absent when the 9th AU Summit opened in Accra.
Summit organizers are mostly-tight lipped on the reasons for
Gadaffi’s absence at the opening ceremony but highly placed
diplomatic sources close to the summit security coordination
told Ghanadot that Gadaffi actually boycotted the opening
because his personal demands were not met.
According to the source, Gadaffi made three basic demands;
that special security arrangements should be made for him to
enable him bring his over a 100-member security detail into
the conference premises and some into the main conference
hall.
He also demanded to be allowed to make a statement at the
opening ceremony and again he made a choice of where he
wanted to sit instead of the spot he was allotted by the
summit organizers.
With regards to his demands for a special security regime,
the source said Gadaffi actually sent almost a 100 of his
security guards to the conference premises on the morning of
the opening ceremony but they were turned away because there
was no space to accommodate such high numbers for just one
head of state.
Moreover summit organizers had put in place adequate
security arrangements for all the dignitaries expected at
the summit, for which reason extra security details for
individual heads of states, including the host, President
John Agyekum Kufuor, were all limited as far as where they
could go was concerned.
“The conference hall is a 1,500 seater-capacity was not big
enough to accommodate all the members of the security
details of every head of state so we allowed only one
bodyguard for each head of state and an extra one outside
the hall. All other persons in any head of state’s entourage
were kept at bay from the hall,” the source said.
Additionally Gadaffi’s large convoy of vehicles could not
have space at the conference premises as other heads of
states and their entourages were allotted a maximum of seven
cars each.
Gadaffi’s demand to make a statement at the opening ceremony
was also turned down because traditionally at the opening of
every AU summit, only the Chairman of the AU (now President
J. A. Kufuor), the Chairman of the AU Commission (now Prof.
Alpha Oumar Konare) and a representative of the United
Nations were allowed to make opening statements.
Regarding Gadaffi’s
choice of a place to sit, the source said he sought to be
given a place behind all the other states, apparently to
attract media attention to himself but that was not part of
the original sitting arrangements in the conference hall.
Moreover he had been duly allotted a place to sit but he did
not want to sit there.
As to be expected, Gadaffi did not take kindly to the
arrangements made by the conference host and organizers, to
wit, he was to submit to their dictates instead of being
giving the chance to satisfy his ego. He might have probably
thought to himself; “who are these black Africans to dictate
to me.”
Analysts said Ghaddafi shot himself in the foot with all the
noise he made in the run up to the summit and with his
seemingly triumphant entry into Accra ahead of the triumph.
Now it seems he had to redeem his image to the millions of
people he addressed and promised to move the union
government forward.
“He was fully aware that he was not on programme to make any
statements at the opening ceremony – he knew quite well that
the agenda for the summit was the grand debate on union
government and not his radical demand for African government
now and yet he went about making promises beyond him,” the
source said.
Some analyst have also said that Gadaffi
could simply not run away from his dictatorial sentiments in
that he thought he could just come into the summit and just
in a day, make three demands and have his way. He knows no
other way than to be a dictator because in his own country
he is the law.
“He probably thinks he is the hope of the African people and
for that he could just disrupt all protocol arrangements at
such an important summit to satisfy his personal
aggrandizement in the name of seeking the common good of the
African people,” analysts said.
The international community is watching how Africa would
behave at this all important summit, especially they are
looking to see what would be the direction of the grand
debate for union government and what would be the main
driving force behind the direction of the debate. This is in
view of the challenging issues of Darfur and Somalia which
stares directly in the face of the leaders.
To think that Ghaddafi would seek to create the impression
that African leaders gathered in Accra to discuss his
proposal for “African Government Now” instead of the well
laid down points of institutional arrangements, modalities
and timelines for the attainment of the union government was
infantile on his part, one analyst said.
Gadaffi’s decision to boycott the opening of the summit is
considered rather suspicious. It gives credence to the
Nigeria conspiracy theory that the Arab MAGRHEB was
conspiring to colonize black Africa under the guise of
“union government now.”
The BBC on July 2, 2007 reported that ahead of the summit,
Ghaddafi had mounted several bill boards and Tripoli and
other cities across Libya, on which he was portrayed as the
King of Africa. If that was anything to go by then his
intentions for pushing for a “Union Government now” are
obvious.
One would have thought that Gaddafi would remain egoistic
and not participate in the grand debate, but he ate humble
pie and showed up on the second day of the debate and made
his case quite clearly that in calling for African
Government immediately, he was only pursuing the dream of
the first President of Ghana, Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah for
the unity of Africa.
Obviously he was not going to create the impression that he
spent all the hundreds of thousands of dollars to travel
1000s of miles from Libya to Accra by road with 109 luxury
vehicles, 500 people just to sleep in the comfort of the
part Libyan owned Golden Tulip Hotel in Accra for a couple
of days and travel back that long distance.
Gadaffi no doubt is rich and he
could just have done the unbelievable; i.e. take this trip
as just a holiday, but analysts believe he is wiser than
that. At least he must have something to tell his fans on
his way back to the comfort of Tripoli.
Samuel Dowouna, Accra, July 3, 2007, Ghanadot.com
|