Channelnewsasia.com
Sunday, November 23, 2008
   
 
  blogs  
 
yournews
   
Coping with the Crisis
Video Finance Features Weather Travel Discussion TV Shows
CNA Live    | About Us 
 
  Home ›
 
World News

 
 

Rice makes Algeria stop on North Africa tour
Posted: 07 September 2008 0055 hrs

 
 
Photos  of

   
 


ALGIERS : US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice touched down in Algeria's capital for several hours Saturday, continuing a North Africa tour that earlier took in Tunisia and Libya.

Rice was greeted at Algiers airport by her Algerian counterpart Mourad Medelci before heading for talks with President Abedelaziz Bouteflika, focussing on the fight against terror, the future of the disputed Western Sahara and the strengthening of economic ties, Algeria's state radio reported.

She was to leave later Saturday for Morocco, the last leg of her tour.

Rice had been in Tunisia where the United States has key military ties and is also seeking to conclude a free trade accord.

Rice had arrived in Tunis from Tripoli where she was the first US secretary of state to visit for 55 years and held a landmark meeting with Muammar Gaddafi to seal a US-Libya rapprochement.

Rice said Saturday that the United States and Libya had decided "to move forward in a positive way" and deal "as well as we can with issues of the past."

Gaddafi and Rice exchanged gifts -- he gave her a lute instrument and she presented a shield with the department's coat of arms.

But the tensions have not completely disappeared.

Libyan Foreign Minister Abdelrahman Mohammed Shalgam said his country does not need "pressure" or "lectures" on human rights, one of the issues raised by Rice in talks.

Rice declared however: "After many, many years it is a good thing that the US and Libya found a way forward." She praised some "strategic choices" made by Libya.

"This is a good time for a constructive relationship between the US and Libya to emerge," Rice said.

Shalgam said the world has changed and Rice's groundbreaking visit to Libya was proof of the new mood.

"The time of confrontation is over. There may still be differences of opinion but this will not endanger the relationship."

Rice earlier described her brief visit as "historic".

"That is not to say that everything has by any means been settled between the United States and Libya. There is a long way to go," she told reporters travelling with her.

"But I do believe that it has demonstrated that the United States doesn't have permanent enemies. It demonstrates that when countries are prepared to make strategic changes in direction the United States is prepared to respond."

Diplomats said Rice wanted Iran and North Korea to know that they could benefit from rapprochement with the West, highlighting Libya's commitment to abandon nuclear, biological and chemical weapons programmes.

Rice met Gaddafi -- once described by President Ronald Reagan as a "mad dog" -- at his Tripoli residence, Bab al Azizia, which was hit in US bombing raids ordered by Reagan in 1986.

After talks they shared an Iftar meal which breaks the fast during the Muslim holy fasting month of Ramadan.

Rice's visit comes less than a month after the two governments reached an agreement on a plan to compensate US victims of Libyan attacks and Libyan victims of US reprisals.

Both sides acknowledged they have differences and Rice said she had raised with Gaddafi the issue of human rights, including the case of jailed dissident Fathi al-Jahmi, 66.

"It is important to have dialogue, including on issues of human rights," she said at the news conference.

"As this relationship goes forward and deepens it will continue to be important for us to have transparency and to talk about these issues in a respectful way."

Shalgam, however, clearly angry at the question raised at the news conference, said Jahmi was receiving medical treatment at a private clinic.

"We care about our own people," he said. "We do need not anybody to come put pressure on us or give us lectures."

US-Libya ties were suspended in 1981 when Washington put Gaddafi's regime on its list of state sponsors of terrorism. It was forced even further into isolation after the bombing of a US airliner over Lockerbie, Scotland, in 1988.

The White House said Rice's visit marked a "new chapter" and that cooperation could expand in education and culture, commerce, science and technology, and security and human rights.

The last US secretary of state to visit was John Foster Dulles in 1953, who met King Idris -- the ruler ousted in a bloodless military coup led in 1969 by Gaddafi.

Last year, Gaddafi proclaimed his love for "Leezza," telling Al-Jazeera television: "I support my darling black African woman. I admire and am very proud of the way she leans back and gives orders to the Arab leaders."

Gaddafi's December 2003 announcement that he was giving up weapons programmes followed secret talks with the United States and Britain.

Rice moved on to Tunisia, a strong US military ally with whom it is trying to negotiate a free trade deal. She will go from there to Algeria and Morocco.

- AFP /ls

 

 



Other world News
Obama orders plan to create 2.5 million new jobs by 2011
Iraq to vote Wednesday on US forces pact
Annan, Carter denied visas and cancel Zimbabwe trip
French Socialists clash as Aubry wins leadership vote
At least 10 killed in Colombia volcano eruption
DR Congo rebel leader slams extra UN deployment
US teenager in apparent online suicide
Somali pirates vow to resist any rescue efforts
New frenzy over Obama cabinet reports
Local elections results throw Nicaragua into political turmoil
Russian leader embarks on Latin America tour
Obama set to unveil Geithner for Treasury, says report
Clinton accepts offer to be secretary of state, according to report

 


Advertisements

 
Affiliate Sites:
 
About Us  |  Contact Us  |  Advertise with Us  |  Terms & Conditions