Chavez says Libya officials discuss peace options

CARACAS,  (Reuters) – A delegation of Libyan  officials is in Venezuela to discuss possible peaceful  solutions to the war in the North African country, Venezuela’s  President Hugo Chavez said yesterday.

Hugo Chavez

A vocal opponent of military action by Western governments,  Chavez is also a close ally of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi  and has proposed talks between rebels and the government.

“Who gave them the right to do this, it’s crazy,” Chavez  said of NATO military strikes. “Because they don’t like the  leader Gaddafi, because they want to take Libya’s oil and water  … they are chucking bombs everywhere.”

“We are dedicated to finding a political solution to the  drama being lived by the Libyan people. A delegation sent by  Gaddafi has arrived in Venezuela and we are seeking a peaceful  outcome,” Chavez said during a speech to workers.

He did not give details of which officials traveled with  the delegation.
Last month, Chavez proposed that an international  commission should visit Libya to seek negotiations between  rebels and the government, but the idea did not gain traction  and was rejected by Gaddafi’s son Seif al-Islam.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro said regional  foreign ministers meeting in Caracas on Tuesday had discussed  ways to end the conflict through diplomacy and dialogue. He  also stressed that Libya’s national unity must be preserved.

“(We worked on) a proposal geared towards the need to  overcome the inertia of the war that has been imposed and makes  a call for understanding and to increase efforts to stop the  barbarity,” Maduro told reporters.

Venezuela has been mentioned as a possible safe haven for  Gaddafi if he ever flees his own country, but Chavez officials  have denied that option is being considered.