Thursday, September 3, 2009

Gaddafi warned the U.S. to look at the behavior

U.S. Ambassador to the UN Susan Rice warned Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi to be careful how they behave during predstojećg stay in New York, so his performance would not cause negative reactions of American citizens who still remember the tragedy at Lockerbie 1988th year.


"From that to President Gaddafi is decided to participate in the sessions of the General Assembly and the Security Council depends on whether or not further exacerbate the feelings of Americans," she said.
Gaddafi will be in New York late septemba first time to attend the UN General Assembly, where he will address the Heads of State and Government of the United Nations immediately after the U.S. president Barack Obama. He will then hold a speech on the UN Security Council session, dedicated to nuclear disarmament and against proliferation of weapons nukleranog. Rice said that of all the heads of state expected to keep the topics and say no more than five minutes, which, as he added, Washington expected from Gaddafi, told the BBC.
Last week, Libyan officials, after the protests of local people, gave up raising beduinskih tent for Gaddafi in a field in the Libyan owned in the town Engelvud near New York. Dozens Prodic in that area have lost their loved ones in the tragedy at Lockerbie. It is believed that Gaddafi and his suite, however, to stay in Manhattan.
The American public was particularly outraged because it was in Libya last month staged a heroic celebration Abdelasetu Megrahiju, convicted of bombing the plane, "Pan American", which exploded over Lockerbie, odnevši to death 270 passengers, mostly Americans.
Megrahi, who suffers from prostate War, last month was released from prison in Scotland for humanitarian reasons, the decision tamnošnjih authorities.
"I do not even need to say that practically every American was piqued because of the welcome which was staged Megrahijju. This is for us is still a sensitive issue," Rice told reporters.
In međuvremnu, the British government is exposed to accusations that it helped release Megrahija, a former Libyan agent, in an effort to improve trade links with Libya, which British Prime Minister Gordon Brown denies.
And U.S. Senator Frank Lautenberg called the Conference a hearing to determine whether the release of convicted Libijca were encouraged lucrative reasons, and the possible signing of oil contracts.

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