Report
By Lamya Tawfik, IOL Staff Writer
CAIRO,
March 25 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Nothing new came out of
the leaked out draft resolultion for the Arab summit, said an Egyptian
political expert.
Speaking
to Islam Online, Ahmed Taha Al-Nakr, an expert in foreign relations in
the Egyptian daily Al-Akhbar, said, “We have to view the draft
resolution that leaked out as just that ‘a leaked out’ document
and nothing more. It’s not a draft resolution until it is announced
by the summit.”
However,
it is a reflection of what the final draft resolution, which the
Beirut summit will release and there is no addition to previous
summits’ drafts except for the fact that it also includes the Saudi
initiative, said Al-Nakr.
Al
Nakr was referring to a copy of the summit's draft resolution, which
was published on news agencies Sunday.
The
draft, sent to the Palestinian leadership by the Arab League, calls
for an Israeli withdrawal from all Arab areas occupied since June
1967, including the West Bank and Gaza Strip, the Golan Heights, and
territories still occupied in south Lebanon, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
It also calls for a just and fair solution for Palestinian refugees,
in line with UN Security Council Resolution 194, the document said.
The Arab League will call for an independent Palestinian state in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip, with Jerusalem as its capital, under
Security Council Resolution 1397, adopted earlier this month.
In return for Israeli acceptance of these conditions, Arab leaders
would formulate a treaty with Israel bringing about an end to the
Middle East conflict, it said.
The summit in the Lebanese capital on Wednesday and Thursday will
focus on Saudi proposals for normal relations with Israel in return
for a total Israeli withdrawal from Arab lands seized in the 1967 war.
Al Nakr added that it is obvious that there is a back-down on the
rights for the refugees to return, as the draft resolution only called
for a just and fair solution for Palestinian refugees, in line with
U.N. Security Council Resolution 194 and did not specify their return.
This,
however, is not the first time for the draft resolution for the summit
to be leaked. “What was strange the last time, was that it was the
first time for an Arab leader (Libya’s Ghaddafi) to announce it on
television. However, this has happened before,” said Al-Nakr.
Al-Nakr
added that the Saudi Peace Initiative, according to many western
publications, was drafted in co-ordination between Riyadh and
Washington and that it also ignored the refugee problem.
“There
are nearly 5 million Palestinian refugees all around the world and
their issue must be tackled and it is Israel’s worst nightmare,”
said Al Nakr.
With
regards to Palestinian President’s Yasser Arafat not attending the
meeting, Al Nakr said that it is better for him not to attend because
his place is among his people in Ramallah. “If Arafat is to attend
the meeting he will have to offer many concessions to Israel;
otherwise they will neither allow him to attend or to even come
back,” he added.
Arafat’s
presence in the summit, he added, is not important, what is really
important is the Arab countries stance. “They need to support the
Intifada with money and with weapons because the Israeli war-machine
is eradicating the Palestininan people merciliessy in a way that is
unprecedented and more barbaric than the Nazi Holocaust,” he said.
“The
real peace process starts when the Palestinians have received all
their rights,” he said.
The
Security Council Resolution 1397 which was adopted earlier this month
is a political maneuver to pacify the Arabs as the United States
prepares to strike Iraq.
“If
the United States is really serious then it should put pressure on
Sharon to stop his actions.”
With
regards to why the draft resolution ignored the strikes on Iraq and
did not reject them, Al Nakr said that the Arab leaders felt that the
message that they gave Cheney while he was on tour was sufficient.
“They probably felt that it was unnecessary to include it, since the
U.S. announced recently that the strikes are not emminent and they
felt that there was no reason to provoke the United States,” Al Nakr
said.
He
added that there would not be an Arabic response even if the U.S.
strikes Iraq. “If there would be an Arabic Response, we would have
seen it in Palestine,” he added.