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Sarkozy angers European Union over Libyas release of
Bulgarian medics
By Steve James
30 July 2007
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Six medical workersfive Bulgarian and one Palestiniansentenced
to death on fabricated charges and held for eight years, have
finally been released by the Libyan government.
The outcome is a coup for the French government. Through the
late intervention of Cecilia Sarkozy, wife of the French president,
and the government of Qatar, France has succeeded in stamping
its interests onto a nearly completed deal to deepen European
Union relations with Libya.
The medical workers were falsely accused in 1999 of infecting
hundreds of children in Benghazi with the HIV virus. They were
arrested, imprisoned, tortured and sentenced to death twice. Exposed
to extended psychological stresses, they have been through a devastating
experience the consequences of which they will be dealing with
long after the media and the diplomats have forgotten them.
Their misfortune was for their lives to fall between the gears
of manoeuvres between the Libyan government and the major powers
over the terms of Libyas reintegration into world imperialism.
Under the terms of deal, not all of which are clear, some 9.5
million from the European Commission will be channelled to the
Benghazi childrens hospital. Each of the families of the
several hundred children infected with HIV will get $1 million
compensation, while the children themselves will reportedly get
lifetime access to medical care.
A fund set up to dispense the compensation will include $44
million from Bulgaria in the form of a debt write-off. Other countries
with debts from Libya have also agreed to them being written off.
The sources of all the funding are deliberately obscure to avoid
the EU giving the impression that it simply paid the cash asked
by Libya. In total some $460 million has been made available.
The government of Qatar, a recipient of French arms sales,
and praised by all parties after the deal, may have been the source
or conduit for much of the cash.
Austrian diplomat Benita Ferrero-Waldner said the deal will
open the way for a new and enhanced relationship between
the EU and Libya and reinforce our ties with the Mediterranean
region and the whole of Africa.
Libyan trade with the EU is already very lucrative, and dwarfs
the small amounts haggled over for the medics release. Oil
accounts for 95 percent of Libyan exports and goes mostly to the
EU40 percent to Italy. Libyan oil is near the surface, light,
and geographically closer to the EU than that from any other major
oilfield.
Since the end of sanctions against Libyabacked by the
United States, the EU and United Nationsthe country has
become the destination of choice for oil companies seeking access
to reserves of around 100 billion barrels, along with large unexplored
areas of desert offering potentially comparable resources. Seven
billion dollars worth of new investment in oil and gas exploration
is anticipated before 2015. In May 2007, for example, British
oil company BP agreed a $2 billion deal covering an area the size
of West Virginia.
Trade with France is already considerable. Imports from Libya
to France were worth 756 million in 2003, mostly oil, and
rose to 1.9 billion in 2006. French construction giant Vinci
is involved with building Libyan leader Muammars Gaddafis
Great Man-made River irrigation canal project.
Yet, as of 2005, France only accounted for 6 percent of Libyan
imports, compared with Italys 21 percent and Germanys
11 percent. In 2006, total EU exports to Libya were 25 billion,
of which France supplied only 3.66 billion. The biggest
oil contracts have gone to the UK and US.
France also has a history of supplying military equipment to
Libya in the 1970s, some of which is still in use, making maintenance
contracts potentially valuable. Relations collapsed following
the 1976 seizure of part the former French colony, Chadthe
contested mineral-rich Aozou Stripand did not begin to recover
until Libyan compensation for a 1989 attack on a French airliner,
UTA 772, destroyed over Chad.
Sarkozys predecessor Jacques Chirac visited Libya in
2004. Two months later, the defence minister, Michèle Alliot-Marie,
signed a letter of intent on military cooperation. A military
maintenance contract followed. Gaddafi expressed an interest in
buying new French fighter planes and helicopters.
In 2006 an initial agreement on cooperation on civil nuclear
development was reached. France also has an eye on the infrastructure,
satellite and road projects that Libya will require in the immediate
future.
Despite these burgeoning relations, for both the EU and France
the captive medics, and the international outrage over their treatment,
presented a growing obstacle. This was greatly sharpened following
Bulgarias accession to the EU on January 1, 2007.
A face-saving solution became imperative and had all but been
agreed prior to Sarkozys election victory, largely under
the auspices of the German EU presidency.
During the French presidential campaign, however, Nicolas Sarkozy
had promised that resolving the affair of the medics would be
one of his initial priorities. Underlying his urgency were both
French corporate demands for a still bigger share of the Libyan
market and French aspirations for their diplomatic and military
resources to be used more aggressively.
After his election, Sarkozy promised Gaddafi that he would
visit Libya. His wife was despatched immediately.
According to an EU official who paraphrased Cecilia Sarkozys
remarks, she told Gaddafi, My husband will come tomorrow
if you do this deal.... You are going to release them [the medics]
anyway, so get on with it. This is your chance to come back to
the international fold.
Significantly, the first the EU heard of the French intervention
was when Cecilia Sarkozy stepped off the plane in Tripoli. Sarkozy
also appears to have given his wife the authority to offer more
tangible titbits beyond his presidential presence.
Sarkozy himself travelled to the Libyan capital Tripoli following
the medics release. The two governments then announced a
memorandum of understanding for the construction of a civil nuclear
power station by the French nuclear operator Areva. According
to Der Spiegel, France will also have access to Libyas
1,600 tons of stored uranium.
Sarkozys own comments make clear that the deal with Libya
cannot be separated from broader French imperialist concerns over
the threat to its interests posed by destabilisation throughout
the Arab world caused by the US occupation of Iraq.
He warned, If we dare to say that civilian nuclear energy
is reserved for the northern coast of the Mediterranean and that
the Arab world is not responsible enough for nuclear energy, then
we are humiliating them and paving the way for a war of civilizations.
Since coming to power, Sarkozy has also developed discussions
with Algeria and Tunisia over possible nuclear power contracts
for Areva and to promote a Mediterranean Union. Seen
as a zone of free trade as well as a means of immigration control,
the diplomatic and military alliance would extend EU and particularly
French influence throughout North Africa and as far east as Lebanon.
Libya also figures centrally in the Sarkozy governments
efforts in sub-Saharan Africa, where Libya and France have previously
come into conflict and where France currently has thousands of
troops.
At the same time as Cecilia Sarkozy was setting off for Tripoli,
Sarkozy entered the political crisis in Lebanon. In a break from
French policy under Chirac, Sarkozys former Socialist Party
foreign minister, Bernard Kouchner, invited all parties in Lebanon,
including Hezbollah, to a series of meetings at Saint Cloud, west
of Paris. Although nothing was achieved, Kouchner intends to hold
more talks toward the end of July.
The meeting of all parties was opposed by the Bush administration,
representatives of which the French declined to invite. The US
has sought to oppose anything that might legitimise opposition
to the Fuad Siniora government in Lebanon.
US reaction to the Libyan deal with the medics was distinctly
cool. Although officials considered the outcome to be positive,
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice restricted her comments to
stating that she hoped to visit Libya sometime soon.
Britains foreign secretary, David Miliband, blandly talked
of extending the hand of partnership to Libya. The
Guardian sniffed that despite Cecilia Sarkozy turning up
to gatecrash the medics release, the outcome
was an achievement for the EUs much vaunted soft
power but this involved suspending moral judgement.
See Also:
France: Sarkozy selects Socialist
Partys Bernard Kouchner as foreign minister
[25 May 2007]
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