Libya
Crisis
Zimbabwe
has expelled Libya's ambassador who last week abandoned Col Muammar Gaddafi and
backed the rebels.
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| The Libyan embassy in Harare was stormed on 24 August |
Taher
Elmagrahi joined protesters who stormed the embassy and raised the pre-Gaddafi
flag.
Zimbabwe's
foreign minister said it did not recognise the rebel National Transitional
Council.
President
Robert Mugabe is a close ally of Col Gaddafi, who bankrolled the African Union.
Only a few African countries have recognised the NTC.
Last week
South Africa blocked moves at the UN to give the NTC access to Libyan
government funds.
Zimbabwe's
Foreign Minister Simbarashe Mumbengegwi, from Mr Mugabe's Zanu-PF party, said
Mr Elmagrahi and all his staff now had 72 hours to leave the country.
"Once
you renounce the authority that gave you the letter of credence and then
proceed to pledge allegiance to another authority... it means that act deprives
you of your diplomatic standing," he said.
When he
switched sides last week, Mr Elmagrahi said: "I am not Gaddafi's
ambassador. I represent the Libyan people."
Correspondents
say Mr Mugabe and his allies are wary of the revolutions which have toppled
three long-serving North African leaders this year.
More than
40 activists were arrested in February after watching videos about the Egypt
uprising.
Mr Mugabe
has condemned Nato's intervention in Libya and says the conflict is really
about oil.

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