CAIRO,
Sept 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak will travel next week to several Arab countries to gather
support for an initiative aimed at convincing Iraq to allow back UN
weapons inspectors and avoid war, a diplomat said Saturday, September
14.
On
the other hand, Al-Jazeera satellite channel said Saturday its
correspondent in Cairo has received information that an Arab summit will
be held in the Egyptian resort of Sharm al sheikh in the next few days
to discuss the issue of Iraq.
Mubarak
will likely set out on a tour Saturday, September 21, he will visit
probably Saudi Arabia, Syria and Jordan, an Egyptian diplomat told
Agence France Presse (AFP).
The
Egyptian president will also send envoys to other Arab countries, he
said, asking not to be named.
"Our
aim is to bring about an Arab initiative to convince Iraq to accept the
return of the inspectors in order to avoid a war."
"It
would be easier to make Iraq accept the return of the weapons experts if
all Arab states jointly advise him to do so," the diplomat said.
Arab
League Secretary General Amr Mussa, currently in New York to attend the
UN General Assembly, voiced support for Mubarak's move.
Mussa
"attached great importance to the diplomatic efforts undertaken by
the different parties to ensure the return of the inspectors to
Iraq", said a statement released by the Arab League's headquarters
in Cairo.
Mussa
on Friday, September 13, met with chief UN weapons inspector Hans Blix,
and stressed the "need to work in order to allow the inspectors to
complete the implementation of the relevant UN Security Council
resolutions" on disarmament.
The
Arab League chief told Blix the return of the inspectors should lead to
the lifting of the UN sanctions imposed on Iraq since its 1990 invasion
of Kuwait, added the statement.
Mussa
also discussed Iraq with Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov, and
attended a meeting of Arab foreign ministers in New York that dealt with
the Iraqi crisis and the Palestinian-Israeli conflict, it said.
Mubarak
on Friday called on Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to "grab the
opportunity" offered by U.S. President George W. Bush's speech at
the UN General Assembly, by allowing back UN weapons inspectors
immediately.
He
warned Saddam that failing to do so would "lead to disastrous
consequences" for Iraq and "serious repercussions" across
the Middle East.
The
UN weapons inspectors pulled out from Iraq on the eve of a December 1998
U.S.-British bombing blitz.
Bush
warned in his speech Thursday that U.S. action against Baghdad was
"unavoidable" unless the United Nations disarmed Iraq which
Bush suspects of harboring a program for weapons of mass destruction.
On
Friday, Bush urged the United Nations to fix a deadline for action
against Iraq in "days and weeks".
Iraq
has rejected the unconditional return of inspectors, saying the teams
would only resume work as part of a deal that provides mainly for the
lifting of the UN sanctions.
The
inspectors had spend more than 10 years in Iraq without proving the
existence of any weapons of mass destruction, and yet the U.S. has
refused to lift the sanctions imposed on Iraq.
Iraqi
officials earlier said they believe that even if Iraq allowed the return
of the weapons inspectors, this will not stop the U.S. from attacking
Iraq. Bush has been determinant to attack Iraq regardless of the
international opposition to a unilateral move against Saddam Hussein.