ACCESSION NUMBER:00000 FILE ID:95112203.TXT DATE:11/22/95 TITLE:22-11-95 U.S. SUPPORTS U.N. DECISION TO CONTINUE SANCTIONS ON LIBYA TEXT: (Text: Gnehm remarks to Security Council) (800) United Nations -- The United States November 22 urged the U.N. Security Council to continue the three-year-old economic sanctions against Libya and called on other nations to tighten the enforcement of the sanctions regime against Tripoli. During a private Security Council meeting to review the sanctions against Libya, U.S. Ambassador Edward Gnehm said that "the United States is more determined than ever to fight terrorism and to bring terrorists to answer for their crimes....Terrorism threatens the whole international community. It must be dealt with collectively." "The Libyan regime must not be given any relief from sanctions until it carries out the actions that will allow it once again to join the family of law-abiding nations," Gnehm said, according to a text of his remarks released by the U.S. Mission to the U.N. after the session. At the end of the review, which is held every 120 days, the Security Council made no change in the mandatory sanctions. In April 1992 the council imposed sanctions cutting air links to Libya because of Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi's failure to cooperate with the United States and Britain in the extradition of two Libyans suspected in the bombing of Pan Am flight 103 and with France in the investigation of the bombing of a UTA flight. The sanctions are to remain in place until Libya cooperates with the three nations, agrees to pay compensation, and demonstrates "by concrete actions" that it has definitively ended all terrorist acts and assistance to terrorist groups. In November 1993, the council added to the original sanctions, freezing Tripoli's assets and embargoing equipment needed by Libya's oil industry. Following is the text of the ambassador's remarks: (begin text) On November 3, President Clinton joined family members and friends of the Pan Am 103 victims, and other distinguished guests at Arlington National Cemetery to dedicate a monument in memory of the 259 passengers and the 11 Scottish villagers who died as a result of that bombing. That simple monument, in the form of a cairn, is built of 279 stones, each of which, as the president said, "Tells of a loss beyond measure -- a child or a parent, a brother or a sister, stolen away through an act of unspeakable barbarism." The ceremony served as a poignant reminder of why we are here today. And why we should determine -- once again -that there is no reason to change the existing sanctions imposed on Libya. 441 innocent people died aboard Pan Am 103 and UTA flight 772, the victims of unconscionable acts of terrorism. After the most painstaking investigations, charges were brought in both the U.S. and the United Kingdom against two Libyan intelligence agents for their role in the Pan Am 103 disaster. The international community has demanded that justice be done, and has required Libya to ensure that these two individuals are brought to trial either in the United States or United Kingdom, and required Libya to satisfy French judicial authorities charged with the investigation of the UTA 772 bombing. Libya continues to defy the international community by refusing to comply with these simple requirements. As President Clinton has affirmed, the United States is more determined than ever to fight terrorism and to bring terrorists to answer for their crimes. Jointly combating terrorism will be a critical task for the United Nations as it shapes its agenda for the coming decades. Terrorism threatens the whole international community. It must be dealt with collectively. The Libyan regime must not be given any relief from sanctions until it carries out the actions that will allow it once again to join the family of law-abiding nations. The United States has the tightest unilateral sanctions against Libya of any nation. We call on other nations to tighten enforcement of their sanctions regimes against Libya and to consider means of expanding sanctions as well. We cannot maintain a business-as-usual approach while Libya refuses to comply with its international obligations. Libyan efforts to dilute the resolutions through offers of compromise must be rejected. There will be no compromise with the demands of justice. Libya should not believe that it can gain advantage through these propositions or the use of intermediaries. Mr. President, Libya should know that the international community remains resolved to see that the requirements contained in all relevant UNSC resolutions are met. Absent such a development, there is no cause for reduced pressure on Libya. On the contrary, if Libya continues to defy the demands of justice and the will of the international community, the Council should begin to consider further measures. (end text) NNNN