- Washington “follows with interest” Morocco’s openness onto Africa (John Kerry)Posted 11 years ago
- The trial of South African Paralympic champion Oscar Pistorius opened in Pretoria on Monday.Posted 11 years ago
- USA welcomes efforts of King Mohammed VI in MaliPosted 11 years ago
- Egypt’s population reaches 94 millionPosted 11 years ago
- Mugabe celebrates his 90thPosted 11 years ago
- Moroccan Monarch to Build a Perinatal Clinic in BamakoPosted 11 years ago
- King Mohammed VI handed a donation of bovine semen for the benefit of Malian breeders.Posted 11 years ago
- Moroccan King’s strategic tour to Africa: Strengthening the will of pan African Solidarity and stimulating the south-south cooperation mechanisms over the continentPosted 12 years ago
- Senior al-Qaida leader killed in AlgeriaPosted 12 years ago
- Libya: The trial of former Prime Minister al-Baghdadi AliPosted 12 years ago
Libya summons U.S. diplomat over spokesman remarks on Jihad appeal
Libyan Foreign Ministry summoned U.S. charge d’affaires in Tripoli on Wednesday March the 3rd to protest remarks by a spokesman for U.S. State Department on Libyan leader’s call to declare Jihad against Switzerland amid a diplomatic row between the two sides.
“The secretary of European Affairs at the General People’s Committee of Foreign Liaison and International Cooperation submitted a protest to the U.S. charge d’affaires over remarks by the official spokesman for the U.S. State Department on comments by the Libyan leader Muammar Ghaddafi in the fifth rally of the Islamic challenge that took place in Benghazi last Thursday,” said a statement by the ministry, carried by the official JANA news agency.
During the event, Ghaddafi called for Jihad, or holy war, against Switzerland over the latter’s decision to ban mosque minarets in the country.
“Any Muslim around the world who deals with Switzerland is an infidel, and is against Islam, against Mohammed, against Allah, and against the Koran,” Ghaddafi told the rally, urging Muslims to boycott Swiss goods, airliners, ships, and embassies.
A day later, U.S. State Department spokesman Phillip Crowley said the Libyan leader’s words brought him back to “the day of September, one of the more memorable sessions of the UN General Assembly that I can recall.”
“Lots of words and lots of papers flying all over the place and not necessarily a lot of sense,” he added.
Crowley’s comments, according the Foreign Ministry’s statement, showed “his lack of knowledge as well as ignorance of what was the context of Ghaddafi’s speech.”
The Libyan ministry also demanded “an apology and a clarification” over Crowley’s words, warning of “negative impacts on economic and economic relations” if no measures were taken.
The statement also said that U.S. President Barrack Obama was mentioned with “appreciation and respect” during Ghaddafi’s interviews with local and international media outlets.
Tension has been mounting between Libya and Switzerland as Libya suspended issuing entry visas to citizens from the Schengen area of 25 European countries, including Switzerland.
The move came in response to Switzerland’s visa blacklist that included 188 Libyan figures amid diplomatic row between the two countries.