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8A – Daily News – Wednesday, April 6, 2011 Gadhafi finds that money can't buy friends in Africa CAIRO (MCT) — For decades, Col. Moammar Gadhafi splashed his oil wealth around sub-Saharan Africa with pompous abandon, building cell- phone networks and luxury hotels, cozying up to kings and guerrillas, hosting peace summits and loudly proclaiming his dream to lead a "United States of Africa." Now, just when Gadhafi could use a few friends, his African beneficiaries haven't exactly rushed to his side. The three African members of the U.N. Security Council — South Africa, Nigeria and Gabon — voted with the United States and Britain last month to autho- rize "all necessary measures" to stop Gadhafi from harming Libyan civilians. The African Union, the league of nations that Gadhafi championed more con- sistently than anyone, has been divided over the U.S.-led mili- tary campaign against him and uttered just a whisper of disap- proval. South Africa, some of whose anti-apartheid fighters trained in Libya starting in the 1970s, slighted Gadhafi again when one of its former senior judges, Navi Pillay, the U.N. high commis- sioner for human rights, recom- mended that Libya be suspended from the organization's human rights council. Uganda — where Libyan state money funds phone and pharma- ceutical companies and built the country's biggest mosque — hastily backtracked last week from a reported offer of asylum to Gadhafi should he resign. "It was a hoax. It is not true," an irritated Tamale Mirundi, a spokesman for the Ugandan pres- ident, said by phone from Kam- pala, the Ugandan capital. Gadhafi's eager, eccentric but ultimately ineffective pursuit of an African sphere of influence encapsulates his dealings with the rest of the world over his 40-plus years in power. He was long on shtick — sweeping rhetoric, elab- orate ceremonies, outlandish out- fits topped by an oversize gold brooch in the shape of Africa — but experts say that his actions betrayed a man interested mainly in himself. His impulsive and often disastrous meddling in far- flung countries and conflicts alienated African leaders much as it did the West. "If all this mythology had been true, you'd be expecting the African Union to be jumping up and down saying, 'My gosh, our brother is being bombed to smithereens by the Western imperialists,' " said Steven Fried- man, the director of the Center for the Study of Democracy at the University of Johannesburg in South Africa. "The mythology has been bro- ken by his actions. If he does have any remaining friends in Africa, they're not terribly influ- ential." In the current crisis, uncon- firmed reports said that African fighters for hire, perhaps Tuareg tribesmen from neighboring countries such as Chad, have backed Gadhafi's forces in west- ern Libya. If true, it would hardly be the first time that he's courted armed men from Africa's ungoverned spaces. Over nearly 42 years in power he offered shelter, financial sup- port and military training to a hodgepodge of leaders and movements, from Idi Amin, who slaughtered tens of thousands during his terrifying reign in Uganda, to the African National Congress, which led the fight against white apartheid rule in South Africa. The ANC's Nelson Mandela had particularly warm relations with Gadhafi, whom he called "brother leader." Mandela helped persuade Gadhafi to hand over the two Libyans accused in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103. "There are a number of cases where Gadhafi earned himself justifiably a large mea- sure of good will with his sup- port of African liberation movements," said J. Peter Pham, the director of the Michael S. Ansari Africa Cen- ter at the Atlantic Council, a Washington research center. "On the other hand, there were many cases where the rebels he supported were warlords." Among them were Charles Taylor and Foday Sankoh, who trained in Libya together during the 1980s and whose rebel armies went on to kill, rape and mutilate countless civilians during the civil war in Sierra Leone. Taylor is facing trial before a special court in the Netherlands, "and many West Africans would hold that Gadhafi should be a co- defendant," said Patrick Smith, the editor of Africa Confidential, a journal. Gadhafi's effort to win friends also took more benevolent forms. For the past several years, Libya has paid the annual membership dues to the African Union for several cash-strapped countries, contributing sometimes more than a fifth of the body's total budget. A state-of-the-art confer- ence center in his hometown of Sirte is a monument to the orga- nization, lined with wall-length posters of a beaming Gadhafi next to the slogan "Long live the African Union." Through a variety of invest- ment arms, Libya has poured bil- lions of dollars into the continent, helping to build infrastructure such as a key Kenya-Uganda oil pipeline and holding controlling interests in the main telecommu- nications companies in Uganda and Zambia. With Gadhafi targeted for financial sanctions, the future of these investments is uncertain, particularly the oil pipeline, envi- sioned as a vital link to the rich crude deposits of Southern Sudan, which will become the continent's newest nation in July. But in recent years China, India and other new powerhouses have dramatically scaled up their investment in Africa, and experts say they're likely to step in if Libyan money vanishes. 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