Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi said on Wednesday US Democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama would have an “inferiority complex” because he is black and if elected he might “behave worse than whites.”
“We fear that Obama will feel that, because he is black with an inferiority complex, this will make him behave worse than the whites,” Gaddafi told a rally. | “We fear that Obama will feel that, because he is black with an inferiority complex, this will make him behave worse than the whites,” Gaddafi told a rally at a former US military base on the outskirts of the Libyan capital Tripoli. “This will be a tragedy,” Gaddafi said. “We tell him to be proud of himself as a black and feel that all Africa is behind him because if he sticks to this inferiority complex he will have a worse foreign policy than the whites had in the past.” He was speaking before thousands of cheering supporters at a ceremony to celebrate the 38th anniversary of the departure of US troops from Libya. Gaddafi, known for his controversial statements, took power in 1969 in a military coup in his oil- and gas-rich North African state. He was shunned for decades by the West, which accused him of supporting terrorism. Obama, the son of a Kenyan father and a white mother from Kansas, would be the first African American elected US president. In his campaign he has largely eschewed the rhetoric of racial struggle and drawn support among blacks and whites.
Arab world: Gaddafi said Obama should adopt a policy of supporting poor and weak peoples such as the Palestinians and be a friend of what he called free Arab peoples rather than US “agents” in the Arab world who, he said, were hated by their own people. “We still hope he will be proud of Africa and change America and free America of its past policy, namely with the Arabs,” said Gaddafi. |