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Libya fuels North African 'arms race'

African Union criticizes UN 'interference' in Guinea
Libya, which currently holds the African Union presidency, on Monday criticised the United Nations for interfering in Guinea's internal affairs by mounting an investigation into a bloody police crackdown. "The African Union strongly rejects this intervention (by the UN) which it considers as interference in the internal affairs of an independent country," the official Jana news agency quoted a African Union presidency spokesman as saying. "All intervention by the UN (in Guinea) shall be considered as a dangerous deviation of the mission of this international organisation," added the spokesman. UN envoy Haile Menkerios visited Guinea on Monday, where he said he received a pledge from military ruler Moussa Dadis Camara to cooperate with the UN's probe into the police crackdown. Guinea troops entered a football stadium September 28 and opened fire on unarmed opposition demonstrators angered by Camara's purported plans to run in the January presidential elections. At least 150 people were killed, according to a UN estimate, while the junta says 56 civilians died. The African Union has supported mediation efforts by Burkina Faso's President Blaise Compaore. The African Union had also set a weekend deadline for Camara to issue a written pledge not to stand in the January election or face sanctions, but the junta leader indicated he wants the issue resolved as part of talks to be hosted by Campaore. Ramtane Lamamra, the AU's top peace and security official, said Monday that the bloc will wait for a signal from Compaore to see if the junta would change its position before slapping on sanctions. International pressure has been mounting on Camara, an army captain who seized power in the mineral-rich West African state in December last year within hours of the death of strongman Lansana Conte. Regional economic bloc ECOWAS imposed an arms embargo at the weekend. The International Criminal Court plans to conduct a preliminary inquiry to determine if war crimes were committed.

Guinean foreign minister holds talks with ICC prosecutor
Guinea's Foreign Minister Alexandre Cece Loua discussed last month's killing of opposition protesters during a visit to the International Criminal Court in The Hague Tuesday, the prosecutor's office said. Loua met ICC deputy prosecutor Fatou Bensouda "to discuss the crimes committed in September and the steps taken by Guinea to punish those responsible", an official in the prosecutor's office told AFP. The office announced earlier this month it had launched a "preliminary examination" of the September 28 violence to determine whether the alleged crimes fell within the court's jurisdiction. Guinea is a state party to the founding statute of the court, the world's only permanent tribunal for the adjudication of genocide, war crimes and crimes against humanity. The junta of President Dadis Camara on Saturday set up its own 31-member independent commission of inquiry into the massacre which would work in tandem with a UN inquiry. The United Nations estimates that about 150 people were killed in a Conakry stadium on September 28 when troops opened fire on a rally urging Camara not to stand in elections planned for January. The junta says 56 people were killed, while rights groups say that at least 157 people were killed and more than 1,200 hurt, including women who were raped by soldiers. (AFP Reports)
by Staff Writers
Tripoli, Libya (UPI) Oct 20, 2009
Libya's reported intention to buy 20 Sukhoi attack jets in a $1 billion weapons deal with Russia underlines a pattern of sizable military acquisitions by North African states that some analysts view as a regional arms race.

Russia's Interfax news agency reported Monday that Col. Moammar Gadhafi's regime in Tripoli planned to purchase 12-15 Sukhoi Su-35 multirole fighters, four Su-30s and six Yakovlev Yak-130 combat training aircraft.

It said the contracts could be signed by the end of this year or early 2010 with Rosoboronexport, Russia's state-run arms exporter.

Most of the weapons systems in Libya's arsenal were bought from the Soviet Union during the Cold War and are now virtually obsolete.

Libya, long shunned by the international community through the 1980s and much of the 90s over its support for terrorism, has been seeking to modernize these aging systems since it was rehabilitated after Gadhafi abandoned his clandestine nuclear arms program in December 2003.

France has sold Libya missiles and other equipment, but on a far smaller scale than Russia. But it is currently making a big pitch to sell Gadhafi 14 Dassault Rafale multirole jet fighters, patrol ships, helicopters and armored vehicles worth $5.8 billion.

The current rundown state of Gadhafi's military, denied new equipment for more than two decades, left it lagging behind its regional neighbors, who have been conducting major upgrades of their armed forces.

An April 2008 visit to Tripoli by Russian President Vladimir Putin and a subsequent visit to Moscow by Gadhafi in early November 2008 -- his first since 1985 -- raised expectations that Libya was planning to buy aircraft, missiles and armor worth $2.5 billion from Russia.

Putin agreed during his visit to write off Libya's Cold War debt to Moscow of $4.5 billion in return for lucrative energy and arms deals.

The Moscow business daily Vedomosti reported at the time that Gadhafi was seeking two squadrons of Su-30MK2s -- 36-40 aircraft.

Other Russian sources said he was also interested in the long-range, high-altitude S-300 air-defense system, the shorter-range Tor-M2E and BUK-M1 surface-to-air missile systems as well as combat helicopters, T-90 tanks and at least one diesel-powered submarine.

The Arab states of North Africa, known as the Maghreb, began significant military upgrades in 2006.

In March of that year Algeria, which had been ravaged by a civil war with Islamist militants throughout the 1990s, concluded a March 2006 agreement with Moscow for weapons worth $7.5 billion.

Although Algeria, a stalwart Soviet client during the Cold War, was opening up to the West, particularly after Sept. 11, 2001, Moscow won the contract by writing off $4.74 billion of Algeria's Soviet-era debt.

Soon after, Morocco, Algeria's traditional rival with whom it is locked in a decades-old dispute over the mineral-rich Western Sahara, announced it planned a major upgrade of its military.

Although short of funds, it started with a French deal to upgrade its Dassault Mirage F1 fighters.

That triggered concerns that the Maghreb states, never the best of friends, were engaging in a regional arms race, with the United States, France, Italy and Britain likely to trail far behind a resurgent Russia in arms sales.

Since then Morocco, a stalwart U.S. ally starved of meaningful procurement for two decades, has opened negotiations with France about buying at least one FREMM frigate.

The United States offered 24 Lockheed Martin F-16 fighters for $2.5 billion, effectively edging out potential French aircraft purchases.

"The timing of Morocco's foray into the international weapons market has increased the perception that Rabat felt the need to respond to Algeria's deal with Russia," Jane's Foreign Report observed recently.

Libya's return to the global arms market was generally expected since, Jane's noted, its military "is, if anything, in a worse state than any of its Maghreb rivals."

But it added that "coming on top of the Moroccan and Algerian deals, it is easy to see why Libya could be seen to be joining a Maghreb arms race."

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Guinea pledges to cooperate with UN inquiry
Conakry (AFP) Oct 19, 2009
Guinea's isolated military junta has pledged to cooperate with a United Nations inquiry into last month's massacre of opposition demonstrators, the UN official leading the probe said Monday. UN envoy Haile Menkerios was speaking after talks in Conakry with top junta officials, including military ruler Moussa Dadis Camara and Prime Minister Kabine Komara. "The prime minister and the ... read more







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