Tripoli: Libya’s besieged leader Col Mummer Gaddafi says that all Libyans love him and that they would protect him.
Gaddafi, 68, has been facing an uprising in the country and mounting pressure from international community to step down.
In an interview to three western media organisations including BBC and US network ABC, Gaddafi, who has ruled Libya for 41 years with an iron hand, laughed at the suggestion he would leave Libya and said that he felt betrayed by the world leaders who had urged him to quit.
“They love me. All my people with me. They love me all. They would die to protect me,” he said in halting English, laughing off international pressure to step down.
In an interview to three western media organisations including BBC and US network ABC, Gaddafi, who has ruled Libya for 41 years with an iron hand, laughed at the suggestion he would leave strife-torn Libya and said that he felt betrayed by the world leaders who had urged him to quit.
“No demonstrations at all in the streets,” claimed Gaddafi. “No one is against us, against me for what?”
The interview took place in a restaurant overlooking Tripoli’s port, and Gaddafi, sometimes breaking into English from Arabic, had seemed relaxed throughout.
One of the interviewers said the media interaction was granted because Gaddafi wanted to get the truth out.
Gaddafi accused Western countries of abandoning Libya and said that they had no morals and wanted to colonise the country.
Asked if he would follow the advice of Western leaders to quit, he said he had no official position to give up.
Gaddafi insisted he could not step down because he is neither a president nor a king.
“It’s((position) honorary. It has nothing to do with exercising power or authority.”
“In Britain who has the power, is it Queen Elizabeth or is it David Cameron?” he asked.
Foreigners didn’t understand the Libyan system, l Gaddafi said, claiming that power was already in the hands of the people.
He had harsh words for the Western leaders who have been part of Libya’s rapprochement with the outside world in recent years. He said he felt betrayed.
“The West, he said, wanted to recolonise Libya – and that was why it had been singled out,” he said.
“I’m surprised that we have an alliance with the West to fight al-Qaeda, and now that we are fighting terrorists they have abandoned us,” Gaddafi said. “Perhaps they want to occupy Libya.”
Gaddafi challenged those, including UK Prime Minister David Cameron, who have accused him of having money abroad, to produce “one shred” of evidence.
He said he would “put two fingers in their eye”.
Gaddafi said true Libyans had not demonstrated but those who had come on to the streets were under the influence of drugs supplied by al-Qaeda.
He said those people had seized weapons and that his supporters were under orders not to shoot back.
Gaddafi urged the United Nations or any other organization to conduct a “fact finding mission” in Libya and questioned how nations could freeze assets, impose sanctions and implement a travel ban based on media reports alone.
Gaddafi called US President Barack Obama a “good man” but said he appeared misinformed about the situation in Libya.
“The statements I have heard from him must have come from someone else,” Gaddafi said. “America is not the international police of the world.”
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