UNITED
NATIONS, October 9 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Iraq agreed in
talks last week to allow U.N. weapons inspectors to decide where and how
to interview its citizens, chief inspector Hans Blix said in a letter
Tuesday, October 8.
The
letter did not explicitly say the interviews could be conducted outside
Iraq, as demanded by U.S. President George W. Bush in a televised speech
Monday, October 7, Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.
But
it did indicate a concession by the Iraqi authorities, who in the past
insisted on monitoring conversations.
The
20-paragraph letter dated Tuesday was addressed to Amir El-Sadi, an aide
to President Saddam Hussein who led the Iraqi delegation to the talks,
held in Vienna. A copy was obtained by AFP.
In
it, Blix and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) director Mohamed
El-Baradei asked El-Sadi to confirm points of agreement on practical
arrangements for resuming inspections in Iraq after a gap of almost four
years.
"We
shall report accordingly to the Security Council," they wrote.
The
main points of the agreement were spelt out by the two U.N. officials at
a joint news conference October 1 with El-Sadi after the two-day
meeting, and the letter contained no surprises.
On
Thursday, Blix and El-Baradei briefed the Council, and were told by the
United States their inspectors could not go to Iraq without a tough new
mandate.
In
his speeh, Bush said inspectors must be empowered to
"interview" Iraqis outside the country, and that the
interviewees' families must be able to leave with them.
In
their letter, Blix and El-Baradei said the U.N. Monitoring, Verification
and Inspection Commission which Blix heads and the IAEA "may
conduct interviews with any person in Iraq whom they believe may have
information relevant to their mandate.
"Iraq
will facilitate such interviews. It is for UNMOVIC and the IAEA to
choose the mode and location for interviews."
Ambassadors
of the five permanent Council members earlier met to discuss the U.S.
demands for a new resolution, AFP said.
Although
the five are divided about the use of military action to enforce the
Council's resolutions, diplomats said there was little disagreement over
the right to interview Iraqis outside the country.
France
and Russia both said the U.S. demand was acceptable, provided that the
inspectors had full discretion, they said.
The
diplomats said no permanent member had yet submitted a draft resolution
for discussion and the ambassadors were unlikely to meet again before
Thursday, when the U.S. Congress is expected to vote to authorize Bush
to send U.S. troops into military action against Iraq.
U.S.
Secretary of State Colin Powell said he was in intense talks with French
and Russian counterparts over their resistance to using the threat of
force against Iraq.
"The
Iraqis are not going to do anything unless there is pressure,"
Powell said. "It would be better for this pressure to be contained
in one resolution."
Russia
and France oppose the threat of force against Iraq in any new
resolution.
"I'm
in constant contact with my French colleague, my Russian
colleague," Powell said. "We are trying to see if there is a
way to resolve this difference of view."
Other
points in the letter by Blix and El-Baradei included the following:
- Inspectors will be granted immediate, unconditional and unrestricted
access to sites deemed sensitive in the past, including eight
presidential palaces.
- U.N. officials have the right to determine the number of inspectors
required for access to any site.
- "Iraq will ensure that no proscribed material, equipment, records
or other relevant items will be destroyed except in the presence of ...
inspectors."
- Iraqi authorities will provide free escorts, transport, assistance
with moving equipment, and a full-time telephone hotline staffed by an
English speaker, along with security for inspectors and their equipment.
- Iraq will guarantee the safety of all air operations outside the
no-fly zones and "will take all steps within its control to ensure
the safety of such operations" within the zones
- Inspectors will be guaranteed visas on the basis of a U.N. certificate
and neither they nor their baggage will be searched.
Meanwhile,
Iraq's Foreign Minister accused Bush Tuesday of trying to trick the
world over Baghdad's alleged weapons of mass destruction, after the U.S.
president threatened Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to disarm or face
war.
Iraqi
Foreign Minister Naji Sabri told AFP on his arrival in Qatar on the last
stop of a tour of three Gulf states, that Bush was repeating
"tricks and clear falsifications with the aim of justifying his
military campaign against Iraq."
Meanwhile,
Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Yury Fedotov told Russian news agencies
that any U.N. resolution must avoid "unreasonable" demands on
Iraq.