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Transcript: Remarks by Secr. Gen of the Org of Islamic conferences

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  • Transcript: Remarks by Secr. Gen of the Org of Islamic conferences

    Federal News Service
    October 11, 2004 Monday

    REMARKS BY H.E. DR. ABDELOUAHED BELKEZIZ, SECRETARY-GENERAL OF THE
    ORGANIZATION OF ISLAMIC CONFERENCES, AT THE ANNUAL COORDINATION
    MEETING OF OIC FOREIGN MINISTERS (UNITED NATIONS HEADQUARTERS, NEW
    YORK, SEPTEMBER 28, 2004)


    ABDELOUAHED BELKEZIZ: Highnesses and Excellences, Ladies and
    Gentlemen,

    As-salam alaykum warahmotullah wabarakatuh.

    We are gathered here today at this coordination meeting, on the
    sidelines of the ongoing fifty-ninth session of the United Nations
    General Assembly, having met three months ago at our annual meeting
    in Istanbul. There, we took many important decisions, a large part of
    which was related to issues listed in the agenda of this General
    Assembly session.

    Today's session was preceded by two days of preparatory meetings of
    various specialized committees, held here in New York. At those
    meetings, views were exchanged and positions were coordinated on some
    issues included in the agenda of the current General Assembly
    session, thus enabling us to be well-prepared for the present
    meeting.

    I wish to stress at the outset that the General Secretariat of our
    organization attaches great importance to today's coordination
    meeting, just as it strives continuously to seize the opportunity of
    holding this meeting to achieve the real aims for which the meeting
    is being held. Those aims are mainly twofold:

    I - To coordinate views and positions of Member States on key Islamic
    issues in order to devise the best way of presenting them and
    arriving at the best result desired in the international arena.

    II - To mobilize total Islamic support for Islamic positions taken
    under the system of Islamic action, giving them the best
    opportunities to succeed.

    There is no doubt that if we are able to seize this opportunity and
    coordinate, we would have done the Islamic Ummah tremendous good and,
    at the same time, rendered a huge political service on Islamic
    issues. In short, we would have taken a giant step on the road to
    unifying joint Islamic action and enhanced the international status
    and value of the Islamic world.

    In coming to this conclusion, I am neither predicting nor being
    merely optimistic. The conclusion is born out of experience. We have
    seen in our international practices especially at the United Nations
    that an appreciable number of issues pertaining to the Islamic world,
    on which member states presented a common front, were decided in
    their favour. That was because their views were taken into account,
    or because they were consulted before many decisions were reached. If
    this approach is better coordinated and enhanced, its future results
    will be more convincing and clearer.

    Excellences and Honourables,

    Before I touch upon the issues discussed in the specialized
    committees in the past two days, I wish to speak very briefly about
    some global issues affecting the Islamic world negatively. Perhaps
    the most important of them is the culture of Islamophobia and its
    link with international terrorism, which has claimed many Muslim
    victims in the bid to fight it. Although the OIC has succeeded in
    opening a door of dialogue among civilizations as a civilized
    response to anti- Islamic ideas, the dialogue is still in need of
    more focus and attention. Furthermore, efforts need to be made to
    take the dialogue from academic and intellectual circles to the
    levels of international civil societies and popular institutions in
    order to disseminate the ideas of Islamic tolerance, change
    stereotypes about Islam and project its noble values among Western
    societies, in particular.

    The issue of human rights is prominent in our priorities. Many
    Muslims in Palestine and abroad face a lot of harassments and human
    rights violations, especially after the September 11 events. Thus
    Islamic groups seeking to deal with the situation should push for
    international resolutions clearly condemning those acts and appealing
    to their perpetrators to stop.

    Excellences and Honourables, Ladies and Gentlemen,

    We express our solidarity with the people of Iraq in their present
    circumstances. Nonetheless, we are satisfied that Iraq has regained
    its sovereignty and authority in the wake of the transfer of
    authority that was completed at the beginning of July, this year. We
    are equally pleased that an interim Iraqi government has been formed.
    The interim government would pave the way for series of processes
    that would eventually lead to the establishment of a fully sovereign
    and independent democratic government, with its constitution ratified
    by the Iraqi people and with its own government born out of free and
    fair elections.

    Part of the priorities of Islamic solidarity is to open up to and
    stand by Iraq to achieve these objectives. The country should be
    provided with all forms of assistance it requires in these
    circumstances so that the conditions for security can be created. In
    this context, we can only condemn the various acts of terrorism
    taking place in Iraq, targeting civilians, the symbol and signs of
    authority and various civil institutions, just as we condemn the acts
    of hostage taking.

    On Palestine, the advisory opinion of the International Court of
    Justice on the separation wall built by Israel on the occupied West
    Bank confirmed the position of international law that the Israeli
    actions were illegal. The court has ruled that the wall should be
    demolished. It also ruled that its effects should be removed and that
    reparation be paid to those affected by its construction. It also
    requested the United Nations Security Council and General Assembly to
    consider necessary measures to implement the ruling.

    The advisory opinion has opened the door for all those affected by
    Israel's illegal practices, which is a flagrant violation of
    international law and international humanitarian law, to approach
    international judicial institutions such as the Internal Criminal
    Court and others with their complaints and grievances. Such would
    serve as a deterrent to the illegalities in many Israeli practices,
    which cannot continue, in the occupied Palestinian territories.

    We have also been following with much doubt and suspicion the
    attitude of the Israeli government towards implementing the road map
    and the plan to withdraw first from Gaza, presented by the Israeli
    prime minister. In an attempt to explain the Islamic position on
    these matters, an Islamic ministerial delegation in June 2004 visited
    the parties that adopted and signed the road map in the European
    Union, the Russian Federation, the United States of America and the
    United Nations. The Islamic ministerial delegation met with the
    foreign ministers of Ireland (representing the EU), the Russian
    Federation, the United States of America and the Secretary General of
    the United Nations. The visits had an obvious positive impact as all
    the representatives of the concerned countries said that they were
    impressed by the unity of the Islamic position on the question of
    Palestine and the plight of the Palestinian people, and by the
    support of the whole of the Islamic world for the restoration of
    Palestinians' rights. We hope that the matter would keep progressing
    until the road map is implemented without prevarication.

    We also stand in solidarity with Syria in its efforts aimed at
    ensuring that the language of dialogue and diplomacy rather than the
    method of threats prevails. We also affirm the right of Lebanon and
    Syria to their internal political choices, and to establish the kind
    of relationship they wish amongst themselves or with others, without
    external interference.

    We also welcome the readiness of the Islamic Republic of Iran to
    positively cooperate with the International Atomic Energy Agency, and
    reaffirm that Iran has the right to acquire nuclear technology for
    peaceful usage.

    We have also been following the efforts at restoring peace and
    security in the various parts of Afghanistan. Security would be a
    prelude to the holding of legislative elections in the country. We
    hope that the elections would go ahead next month as scheduled.
    Hence, we also appeal to countries to pay more attention to post-war
    and conflict reconstruction, in order to pave the way for life to
    return to normal.

    Concerning Kashmir, we have renewed hopes that the new condition in
    the region, following the political developments in India, would
    bring a solution that is based on relevant Security Council
    resolutions which gives the Kashmiris their right of self-
    determination.

    In Azerbaijan, Armenia has made no moves to remove the effects of the
    hostilities in Azerbaijan or of the occupation of about 20% of that
    country. We stress in this connection the principles of international
    law and the Security Council resolution which pronounced the
    occupation of territories by military force illegal. We reiterate our
    rejection of the Armenian practices aiming and modifying the
    demographic configuration of the occupied Azerbaijan regions and at
    changing the data there, in organizing in particular elections in the
    occupied region of Nagorno Karabakh. We hope that international
    efforts would continue, including those of the Organization for
    Cooperation and Security in Europe to end the conflict in accordance
    with relevant resolutions of the Security Council.

    Concerning Cyprus, the international position has become apparent in
    the plan proposed by the United Nations Secretary General to end the
    Cyprus crisis. The plan was to establish a federal Cyprus government
    to be based on a formula of two equal states in Cyprus: a Turkish
    Cyprus State and a Greek Cyprus State. The Turkish Cypriots voted in
    favour of this plan while the Greek Cypriots rejected it, thus making
    the Turkish side align with the path of international legality. Thus
    the Turkish side succeeded in creating favourable conditions to
    remove it from political isolation. This led the European Union and
    the United States to begin to cooperate with and extend various
    assistances to the Turkish side. So, it is proper for brotherly
    countries in the OIC to take after the European and American
    initiatives and to open doors of cooperation and assistance with the
    State of Turkish Cyprus provided for by the international plan
    mentioned.

    The situation in the Darfur region of Sudan has begun to take an
    international turn, with many governments issuing allegations and
    threats and urging the Sudanese government to urgently take measures
    to end the humanitarian crisis there. The OIC General Secretariat had
    sent a fact finding mission to Darfur. That mission prepared a report
    on the situation, which has been sent to the UN Secretary General. I
    believe that with the complexities of this crisis, Member States
    should extend all diplomatic and material assistance possible to help
    the Sudanese government resolve this problem soon. They should be
    very concerned about the territorial and national unity of Sudan,
    which again is being targeted. Member States should take conscious
    responsibility of the dangers threatening this Member State. We hope
    that donor countries would live up to their promises to help with
    humanitarian supplies to tackle the crisis as a prelude to finding a
    lasting solution to the social problems in that region.

    Concerning Somalia, we welcome the efforts of the IGAD mediation
    committee, working with the Somali factions, aimed at establishing,
    on the Somali factions which resulted in the inauguration of the
    proposed Somali parliament last month. We appeal to these factions to
    be part of those efforts, as a prelude to a new interim federal
    government in which all Somali sides would be represented.

    This is more so because the Security Council has passed a resolution
    to punish any Somali faction that disrupts the peace process. We also
    welcome the attempt by the African Union to send military observers
    to Somalia. We hope all these efforts would succeed in returning
    Somalia to its former state of peace, security, tranquility, rule of
    law and participation in international life.

    The foregoing are some of the issues that should receive our
    attention and solidarity. As the General Assembly begins this
    session, I am certain that our Islamic cooperation and solidarity
    would be manifested in the unified positions which had been taken by
    our states and governments at the recently held summit and
    ministerial meetings of the OIC.

    I hope that we would live up to the level of the trust placed on our
    shoulders as we work together to serve the objectives of the Islamic
    Ummah and elevate its position.

    Wa salam alaykum warahmotullah wabarakatouhou.)
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