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“…those who invoke international law must themselves submit to it,” Annan
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UNITED
NATIONS, September 21 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) - UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan was to renew his criticism of US
President George W. Bush Tuesday, September 21, accusing his policies
of eroding the rule of law by applying unilateral policies, not
respecting the rule of international law.
“Those
who seek to bestow legitimacy must themselves embody it, and those who
invoke international law must themselves submit to it,” Annan was to
say in his address before the UN General Assembly later Tuesday,
according to his prepared remarks, reported Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
“In
Iraq, we see civilians massacred in cold blood while relief workers,
journalists and other non-combatants are taken hostage and put to
death in the most barbarous fashion.
“At
the same time, we have seen Iraqi prisoners disgracefully abused,”
he would add, drawing a parallel between the Iraq bloodshed and the
prisoner scandal in a way destined to irk Bush, who was to due to
speak after Annan.
According
to leaked excerpts of the speech, Annan was to open this year's annual
debate of world leaders at the United Nations by criticizing Bush's
plan to deliver democracy to Iraq through force in his speech aimed at
underlining the importance of the rule of law.
“It
is the law, including Security Council resolutions, which offers the
best foundation for resolving prolonged conflicts -- in the Middle
East, in Iraq and around the world.
“All
states -- strong and weak, big and small -- need a framework of fair
rules.”
In
a bid to reinforce the rule of international law, Annan is to urge the
United States and other UN members to embrace a raft of international
treaties designed to enforce fair-trade rules, fight terrorism, and
combat the spread of nuclear, chemical and biological weapons,
according to the Washington Post.
“The
Bush administration has come under intense criticism at the United
Nations for opposing popular international treaties, including a
global ban on nuclear tests and an accord to slow the production of
emissions that fuel global warming.”
Annan
will address the General Assembly less than an hour before Bush takes
the podium, and it will be only days after Annan said publicly he
considers the US-led invasion of Iraq
illegal.
Annan's
top aides, however, insisted that he is not seeking to rehash the
dispute over the war's legitimacy, according to the Washington Post.
“Stirring
things up is not his stock in trade,” it quoted as saying a senior
UN official who briefed reporters on Annan's speech. “He is much
more concerned about the future of Iraq.”
Bush
Defiant
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“And the United States is prepared to lead” Bush
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Annan
has labored for a year to heal the deep divisions over the Iraq
invasion that brought down Saddam Hussein, and his wide-ranging
address was to refer to the crisis in Sudan, the Middle East conflict
and Russia's hostage tragedy.
Bush
failed to win Security Council backing for the Iraq war and, if
Annan's criticisms were less blunt than those he offered last year,
his position remained at odds with Bush's defense of the war in the
fight against terror.
Bush
has already indicated he will defend the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan
as part of a sweeping global campaign to fight terror in the name of
freedom.
“Never
in the history of the United Nations have we faced so many
opportunities to create a safer world by building a better world,”
the US president said Saturday, in a preview of his own address.
“For
the sake of our common security, and for the sake of our common
values, the international community must rise to this historic moment.
And the United States is prepared to lead.”