Uganda becomes the fist country to welcome Gaddafi

PanARMENIAN.Net - Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi is welcome to live in the East African nation of Uganda, the president's spokesman told The Associated Press on Wednesday, in what appears to be the first country to offer him refuge.

An intense diplomatic effort is under way to find a country where Gaddafi can go, as an international military effort against Gaddafi's forces continues.

The spokesman for Uganda's president, Tamale Mirundi, told the AP that Gaddafi would be welcome in Uganda. He said Uganda's policy is to accept asylum seekers, especially because so many Ugandans fled the country during the longtime rule of dictator Idi Amin.

"So we have soft spots for asylum seekers. Gaddafi would be allowed to live here if he chooses to do so," Mirundi said.

Another possible reason Uganda might accept Gaddafi is that Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni is, like Gaddafi, among the old guard of African leaders. Museveni has been in power for 25 years, though he won re-election in February amid signs that many Ugandans still genuinely support him.

Gaddafi has been in power for more than 40 years.

Museveni had planned to travel to Libya in mid-March, but sent his foreign minister instead. Days later, Museveni issued a nine-page statement denouncing the U.S. and European military action for interfering in what he said was an internal matter. He also praised Gaddafi, though he urged the Libyan leader to negotiate with the rebels.

"Whatever his faults, is a true nationalist," Museveni said of Gaddafi. "I prefer nationalists to puppets of foreign interests."

One complicating factor to Gaddafi's living in Uganda may be the International Criminal Court, whose chief prosecutor has said he will decide by May whether to seek an indictment against Gaddafi. Uganda is a signatory to the statute that created the court, according to Huffington Post.

It was reported earlier that Gaddafi could leave Libya in Nicaragua, but official confirmation of this information does not appear, despite the fact that Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega spoke in support of the Libyan leader.

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