AU Peace Plan Accepted By Khadafy

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AU Peace Plan Accepted By Khadafy

TRIPOLI Libyan leader, Moammar Khadafy, has accepted the peace plan offered by the African Union (African Union / AU) to end the conflict in the country, says Jacob Zuma, President of South Africa, Sunday (04/10/2011) night.
("From left to right) President Amadou Toumani Toure of Mali, President Jacob Zuma of South Africa, President Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo, Libyan leader Moammar Qaddafi, Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz from Mauritania and the President of the African Union Jean Ping photographed together outside the tent that Qaddafi settlements established in the complex in the Bab al-Aziziya in Tripoli on Sunday (10/04/2011")

Road map for the African Union's peace bid, as reported by the telegraph, calling for immediate ceasefire, open a channel for humanitarian aid and talks between the opposition and the government. Khadafy last month has ignored the truce which he declared following the international air attack.

Zuma is part of a delegation of African leaders who arrived in Tripoli to try and persuade Khadafy to stop the violence committed against their people. Zuma and Denis Sassou Nguesso of Congo is part of those who flew to Tripoli and plan to go into opposition in Benghazi.

In Benghazi, the leaders will submit their plans to the leaders of the opposition. No one leader it was in talks to provide details on what is contained in the roadmap. So far, opposition leaders rejected a ceasefire plan that includes allowing Khadafy or his son remained in power.

In addition to Zuma and Nguesso, the delegation includes two other African leaders, namely Amadou Toumani Toure of Mali and Mohamed Ould Abdel Aziz from Mauritania. Minister of Foreign Affairs of Uganda, Henry Oryem Okello, who represented President Yoweri Museveni, complementing the African Union team.

Sunday morning, members of the African Union delegation was to meet the demand Moammar Khadafy to take pictures together outside the tent Baduinya in its complex in Bab al-Aziziya in Tripoli.

Meeting members of the African Union delegation came as NATO launched a new offensive against troops loyal to Khadafy. The attack destroyed 25 tanks and provide a much needed boost opposition fighters. The attack was designed to deal with Khadafy who continue to attack the army had fired artillery over the weekend.

Zuma, who with his team met with Khadafy for several hours in the compound of his residence in Tripoli, also asked NATO to stop air strikes against Libyan targets of government-suggestion in order to "give the truce a chance." "I have some commitments that forced me to leave now, but we have completed our mission with the leader's brother (Khadafy)," Zuma said after the talks. "The delegation's leader you have accepted the road map as we say. We must give a ceasefire, a chance," he said. "The delegation ... will be working tomorrow to meet with the other party, to talk to everyone and deliver a political solution to the crisis in Libya."

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