KHARTOUM,
June 25 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - “No to backing away from
religion, No to terrorism in Islam and No to disunity’. With these
three ‘No’s the Sudanese President Omar Hassan Al Basheer opened
the 3-day 29th session of the Organization of Islamic Conference
(OIC)’s Foreign Ministers Summit.
The
meeting is being held under the banner of "Solidarity and
Dialogue".
"I
salute the struggle of the Palestinian people under the leadership of
President Yasser Arafat," he said, to warm applause and as many
of the delegates cried Allah Akbar (God is great), reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
He
said that the OIC was formed because of the aggression on the Al Aqsa
Mosque and added that “the land of Palestine is now facing a Zionist
project which aims to uproot the Palestinians. We have to stand by
them to defend their right according to international legitimacy.
He
called for a real reform for the OIC, to defend the causes of the
Islamic world and called for the modernization of its organizational
body and its mechanism to achieve ‘noble causes and the ambitions of
the Islamic world’. He welcomed the conciliation between Iraq and
Kuwait and said that “we refuse any aggression against Iraq because
it is a threat to Islamic security and we are also very worried by the
tensions between Pakistan and India.”
The
Sudanese President said that the 29th session is the first normal
session after the September 11 attacks and said that “we need to be
aware that there are many elements working on a new formula for the
world. The developments which are taking over the world now are making
you responsible to return to balance the International relations which
have been shaken up.”
He
said that it is important that the meeting discusses the issue of the
inter-religious dialogue and added that the Islamic world has a lot of
positive values in addition to a rich civilization, history, culture
and resources that can not be ignored. “It is our duty today to
adopt a dialogue that will make these values appear,” he said.
The
Arab leaders focused attention on U.S. President George W. Bush's
speech on Middle East peace, which dominated the opening day of the
meeting.
"We
hope the points contained in this speech will form an outline to
creating a just and global peace in the region, and lead to a
Palestinian state as approved by the Palestinians (and) represented by
Yasser Arafat," said Qatari Emir Sheikh Hamad bin Khalifa
al-Thani, in a speech read to the meeting by his Foreign Minister,
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jaber al-Thani.
Arab
League Secretary General Amr Mussa raised the issue of the speech both
in his speech and a statement to journalists.
Bush's
blueprint for Middle East peace contained some "positive
points", he said, while stressing that Arab countries must be
involved in the creation of a Palestinian state.
"It
is a very important speech by the American President and it must be
given all the attention it deserves, because we are at a very critical
moment," he said.
"I
hope that consultations among Arab countries will lead to an objective
Arab stance to assist the creation of a Palestinian state," the
Arab League chief told reporters.
The
Foreign Ministers of Saudi Arabia and Syria, Prince Saud al-Faisal and
Faruq al-Shara, who were also present at the OIC meeting, refused to
comment on the Bush speech to reporters.
In
the ministerial meeting, Mussa said the Bush speech "deals with
many issues and raises many questions."
"This
speech raises the creation of a Palestinian state and it is a point
about which we must talk, in detail, with the U.S.
administration," he said, addressing the Arab states in the
57-member organization.
"In
any case, it is impossible to give up on the rights of the Palestinian
people to return to June 4, 1967 borders, to an independent state with
East Jerusalem as capital and a fair solution for Palestinian
refugees," he said.
Unlike
his counterparts, the Palestinian representative, Faruq Qaddumi, the
PLO's political department chief, made no reference to the Bush speech
as he addressed the conference in the name of the OIC's Arab states.
The
Foreign Ministers’ meeting is expected to discuss several issues
including a proposed peace conference, the Arab peace initiative as
well as other developments related to the Arab-Israeli conflict, the
situation of the city of Jerusalem and the Islamic endowments in the
holy city.
The
conference will also discuss the situation in Afghanistan, Bosnia,
Herzegovina, Kosovo, Chechnya, Jammu and Kashmir, the political
situation in Sierra Leone, the Comoros Islands, developments of
Iraqi-Kuwaiti relations, the Armenian aggression on Azerbaijan and the
situation in Cyprus.
Also
on the agenda are issues of Islamic minorities, as the meeting will
discuss the protection of the rights of these groups who are part of
the OIC as well as the Muslims in South Philippines, the Muslim
minorities in Myanmar (previously known as Burma) and the follow up of
human rights issues in Islam.
The
conference will also go through the media organizations that are
affiliated to the OIC such as the Islamic International News Agency
and the Organization of the Union Of Islamic Countries Radio Stations.
In
the economic field, the conference will discuss the economical
situation of some member states and the problems they face and to
attempt to support economical reform in these countries and the
strengthening of trade relations between them. They will discuss the
effects of regional and international economic unities on the Islamic
world including efforts such as the introduction of the single
European currency the Euro.
The
previous OIC Foreign ministers meeting was held in May 2001 in the
Qatari capital, Doha, and the Palestinian Intifada was at the top of
its agenda.