WASHINGTON - In a bid to head off any embarrassing incidents, the State Department said Tuesday it is working with Libya to find a place for Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi to stay when he visits the United Nations next month.
Libya has drawn criticism from families and friends of Americans who died in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland, because the only person convicted in the attack, a terminally ill Libyan, received a hero's welcome last week when he returned to his home country from a Scottish prison.
Gadhafi might set up a Bedouin-style tent at a Libyan-owned estate in the upscale New Jersey suburb of Englewood to accommodate him and his entourage. Some of the families of victims of the Lockerbie bombing -- 23 of the 259 people killed were from New Jersey -- live nearby and local officials and residents have protested the idea.
State Department spokesman Ian Kelly said U.S. officials will keep in mind the "very raw sensibilities" of the families as it works to find a residence for Gadhafi, who is set to address the U.N. General Assembly on Sept. 23.
"Our priority has been and will remain the families of the victims of this tragedy," Kelly told reporters. "We, of course, are sensitive to the concerns of the communities that might be affected by any travel arrangements made for the Libyan delegation."
Kelly said the department is in discussions with lawmakers and local authorities in the New York area on the matter and is "also talking to the Libyans to highlight the concerns that we have and the very raw sensibilities or sensitivities of the families who live in that area."
Kelly stressed that no decisions have been made as to where Gadhafi will stay. Nor, he said, has a decision been made on a request by Sen. Frank Lautenberg, a New Jersey Democrat, who has asked that Gadhafi's movement be limited to the immediate area around U.N. headquarters.
Under its host nation agreement with the United Nations, the United States is obligated to allow foreign leaders, other officials and diplomats into the country to visit or work at the U.N. with limited exceptions. However, provisions allow U.S. authorities to restrict their movement to a 25-mile (40-kilometre)radius around U.N. headquarters.
It was not immediately clear if Lautenberg's proposal, which would essentially prevent Gadhafi from leaving the U.N. compound in Manhattan, would be enforceable.
Gadhafi met in person with the freed Lockerbie bomber, former intelligence agent Abdel Baset al-Megrahi, on his return to Libya.
Top officials in the United States and Britain, including President Barack Obama and Prime Minister Gordon Brown, condemned al-Megrahi's welcome in Libya. U.S. officials have also strongly criticized Scottish authorities for approving his release, which was ordered on compassionate grounds because he is dying of cancer.