Gadhafi, Chavez push new alliance

Libyan leader visits Latin America

— Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi called for a NATO-like defense alliance for Africa and South America as leaders from the two continents agreed to link up to gain more clout as economic and political blocs.

Gadhafi and Venezuela's Hugo Chavez led about 30 presidents in calling for stronger "South-South" ties at a two-day summit ending Sunday that was the Libyan ruler's first visit to Latin America.

"We have to form a NATO for the south," Gadhafi said Saturday. "And that's not a terrorist action. We have a right."

He denounced the U.N. Security Council as an elite club where nations such as Libya have no voice, and called for the two continents to unite to demand change.

Chavez said Venezuela is looking into energy investments in Africa and called for joint mining projects, saying the two regions together have enormous potential.

"There will no longer be a unipolar world," Chavez said, referring to U.S. dominance. "In the 21st century, the African Union and South America will be truly great powers."

Seven South American leaders signed an agreement to create a regional development bank with $20 billion in startup capital, and Chavez offered to help create a "South-South bank" with African countries in the future.

"We're 65 countries with more than 1 billion inhabitants who want to be heard," said Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, who agreed with Gadhafi that the Security Council has "lost relevance."

Leaders called for a U.N. overhaul and agreed to deepen cooperation in energy, mining, finance, agriculture and other areas.

The meeting on Venezuela's Margarita Island addressed a wide range of concerns, from hunger in Africa to the economic crisis and a common response to climate change.

"There is no better response to the crisis than integration," Silva told leaders on Saturday. "There is no global challenge that cannot be faced jointly by Africa and South America."

The summit also gave Chavez an opportunity to increase his influence in Africa while criticizing U.S. and European influence in poorer nations.

Chavez has built close ties with countries at odds with Washington such as Iran and Syria, and has defended Iran's nuclear program while saying Venezuela also plans to tap atomic energy - and itshouldn't concern world powers like the U.S.

Gadhafi echoed Chavez's concerns about the world's top economic powers, saying through an interpreter, without naming countries, "They think the planet is divided into two parts - masters and slaves. The masters are in the north and in the south are the slaves."

Gadhafi, who has ruled Libya since he seized power in a 1969 coup, has sought a greater leadership role internationally in recent years and is currently chairman of the African Union.

The summit brought together the African Union and the South American bloc Unasur.

African leaders including Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe, South Africa's Jacob Zuma and Algeria's Abdelaziz Bouteflika met eight South American presidents from Ecuador's Rafael Correa to Chile's Michelle Bachelet.

Taking a stance on the top political standoff in Latin America, leaders backed a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning "acts of intimidation" against the Brazilian Embassy in Honduras, where ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya is holed up.

Bolivian President Evo Morales was one of several Chavez-allied leftists who called a socialist-oriented approach essential to confronting problems from poverty to global warming.

"Who is responsible?" Morales asked leaders - referring to climate change, which is blamed for vanishing glaciers in Bolivia and throughout the Andes. "Capitalism is the enemy of humanity." Information for this article was contributed by Fabiola Sanchez of The Associated Press.

Front Section, Pages 4 on 09/28/2009

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