/ 4 March 2003

Gaddafi moans about recall of envoy fom Riyadh

Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Tuesday that he opposed recalling his country’s ambassador from Saudi Arabia, insisting he had not been consulted about the decision.

Gaddafi said he had been surprised to see a television report of Monday’s recall, which followed a live TV spat between him and Saudi Crown Prince Abullah bin Abdul Aziz at last weekend’s Arab summit.

”This matter is the responsibility of the foreign ministry,” said the Libyan leader, three days after the row which was broadcast live around the Arab world from the conference venue in the Egyptian resort of Sharm el-Sheikh.

The maverick colonel said a fit of anger could not so easily sever the links of brotherhood and friendship between the two countries. ”I believe relations don’t need to be cut even in the event of war,” he said.

A Libyan official announced on Monday that parliament had decided to recall the ambassador from Riyadh for consultations.

The summit spat started when Gaddafi charged in a speech to

fellow Arab leaders that Riyadh was ready to ”strike an alliance with the devil” to shield itself from Iraqi President Saddam Hussein.

Crown Prince Abdullah, Saudi Arabia’s de facto ruler, shot back at Gaddafi calling him a ”liar” and ”a slave of colonialism”.

Relations between the two countries have been strained several times since Gaddafi came to power in 1969, but have improved since 1999 when Saudi Arabia joined South Africa in brokering a suspension of UN sanctions imposed over the 1988 bombing of a US airliner over the Scottish town of Lockerbie. – Sapa-AFP