Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Switzerland: Break our laws, just make sure you pay us and we'll apologize.

Thank God it didn't happen in the US, or Obama would have done a lot more than apologize.







Swiss president apologises over Kadhafi son's arrest



by Imed Lamloum
August 20, 2009


Swiss President Hans-Rudolf Merz apologised to the Libyan people on Thursday over the arrest in Geneva a year ago of a son of Libyan leader Moamer Kadhafi.

"I express to the Libyan people my apologies for the unjust arrest of a Libyan diplomat by Geneva police," Merz said at a joint news conference in Tripoli with Libyan Prime Minister Baghdadi Mahmudi.

Hannibal Kadhafi and his pregnant wife were arrested in a luxury Geneva hotel on July 15, 2008 after two servants claimed they had been mistreated.

The couple were freed after two days in custody on bail of 500,000 Swiss francs (312,500 euros, 444,000 dollars).

The complaint was dropped after a lawyer for their servants -- a Moroccan and an Tunisian -- said they had received compensation.



[This statement and the dropping of the lawsuit does not in any way address the complaint, simply that they were paid off. The Swiss are apologizing for a criminal act that did occur, but they want the money more than they care about the law.]


In October, Libya responded by suspending oil deliveries to Switzerland, withdrawing assets worth an estimated five billion euros from Swiss banks, ending bilateral cooperation programmes and placing restrictions on Swiss companies.

Two Swiss businessmen in Libya were also banned from leaving the country.

Merz said in response to a question that "the Libyans have assured me that they will be allowed to leave before September 1."

"Today I have fulfilled my mission and achieved my goals of wiping the slate clean of last year's incident and opening the Libyan market" to Swiss firms once again, Merz said after more than a year of strained relations.

"It is a satisfying outcome for me."

The Swiss president also had talks in Tripoli with Foreign Minister Mussa Kussa, a Libyan government official said earlier.

Mahmudi said Libya and Switzerland would set up a joint committee to examine what he called the "tragic incident" in Geneva.


"Today we have been able to take a first step towards solving this problem. Switzerland has presented its official and solemn apologies concerning the unjust arrest of the son" of Kadhafi, the Libyan premier said.


Last month Swiss Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey said her country was trying to organise a meeting between Merz and the Libyan leader to defuse the crisis.


For Switzerland the dispute is "a matter of law, while for Libya it is a matter of honour," she said.

The authorities in Tripoli had sought an apology over the so-called "Hannibal affair," and had also unsuccessfully asked for the people responsible for the arrest of the Kadhafis to be punished.

[The son had to get going - he had to take the killer of over 250 people home to Libya. He is a busy guy.]






















Libya

Make Mine Freedom - 1948


American Form of Government

Who's on First? Certainly isn't the Euro.