/ 1 March 2011

UN chief denounces Gadaffi’s, Gbagbo’s ‘war on people’

United Nations (UN) Secretary General Ban Ki-moon on Monday condemned the leaders of Libya and Côte d’Ivoire for waging war on their own people, as he urged the international community to stand united against them to prevent more bloodshed.

The Libyan regime has met “the winds of change” sweeping across the Middle East and North Africa with violence against its own citizens, and long-time leader Moammar Gadaffi “lost legitimacy when he declared war on his people”, Ban told reporters after touring the Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington.

Rights groups say at least 1 000 people have been killed in Libya in a brutal crackdown by forces loyal to Gadaffi on pro-democracy demonstrators who took to the streets nearly two weeks ago in the wake of upheavals in neighbouring Egypt and Tunisia.

In Côte d’Ivoire, violence is escalating as President Laurent Gbagbo clings to power despite the international community recognising his rival Alassane Ouattara as the legitimate winner of an election held three months ago.

“The winner of the election in Cote d’Ivoire is Mr Ouattara and Mr Gbagbo should cede power to preserve peace and stability and the future of Cote d’Ivoire,” Ban said.

“In Cote d’Ivoire, civilians are being killed as they stand for democracy. And we, nations united, stand with them.”

‘Never again’
Ban was speaking to reporters after touring the museum, which stands as a memorial to the six-million Jews who died at the hands of the Nazis during World War II.

Alluding to the atrocities committed 70 years ago by Adolf Hitler’s Nazis, Ban said: “Once again, we are being tested.”

“‘Never again’ is for all people, in all places,” he said, referring to the call made after World War II to never allow a repetition of the Holocaust.

“History’s most tragic chapters are written when we fail to heed that call,” the UN chief said as he outlined measures that have already been taken against Gadaffi and Gbagbo, and warned that “further action may well be necessary”.

Ban had met earlier with United States President Barack Obama, whom he praised for his firm and decisive leadership on the crisis in the Middle East.

Washington has frozen $30-billion in Libyan assets, and US naval and air forces are being moved into position near Libya, as Western countries weigh possible military intervention.

During his visit to the Holocaust Museum, Ban paused silently by the eternal flame in the Hall of Remembrance before lighting several candles under the name of the most infamous of the Nazi German death camps built on Polish soil, Auschwitz-Birkenau, where at least a million people died in purpose-built gas chambers. — Sapa-AFP