By
Hamdy Al-Husseini, Sobhy Mujahid, IOL Staff
CAIRO,
January 30 (IslamOnline) – The American massive military build-up in
the Gulf and the flooding reinforcements lack any basis in
international law, said participants in a Cairo-hosted seminar on
“Striking Iraq & International Legitimacy” held Wednesday,
January 30.
The
build-up coincides with mounting American threats of brazen aggression
against an Arab and Islamic country and a sovereign member of the UN,
they stressed.
The
current international resolutions enforced on Iraq also lack
legitimacy according to international laws because they should have
been revoked after the liberation of Kuwait, said the participants.
They
appealed to the world community to exert utmost efforts to head off
the looming American-led aggression which will be a flagrant violation
of divine religions and international laws.
Speaking
to IslamOnline on the sidelines of the seminar, Ahmed Omar Hashim,
President of Al-Azhar University, stressed that the peoples and rulers
of the Arab and Islamic countries must stand united to oppose this
American attitude towards Iraq and Palestine.
If
you accept striking Iraq today, tomorrow other Arab and Islamic
countries, which are not appealing to the United States, would meet
the same fate.
The
would-be aggression on Iraq is categorically rejected from both a
religious and a legal point of view, he said.
Hashim
exhorted the world community to should its responsibility vis-à-vis
the Iraqi people, asserting that the future of Iraq is an issue to be
decided by the Iraqis themselves.
“The
United States if gearing up for assaulting Iraq under claims of
combating terrorism which Washington itself practices. Spare this
region more war and pains,” he stressed.
Gaafar
Abd el-Salam, Secretary General of the Islamic Universities Society,
told IslamOnline that “any American military aggression against Iraq
is prohibited by the fourth article of the UN Charter.”
'UN
Article 51'
“Article
51 of the UN Charter entitles countries coming under attack from an
aggressor to fight back,” he underlined.
Abd
el-Salam made it clear that the international community only
authorizes war in two events, namely, in self-defense or through a UN
Security Council mandate, which should never be a unilateral act.
Therefore,
he stressed, every act adopted by the United States against Iraq since
1991 is a violation of international law.
Every
thing should have come to an end after the end of the 1991 war and the
liberation of Kuwait but Washington maintained an all-out embargo on
Iraq, continued to starve its people and enforced the self-styled
no-fly zones in northern and southern Iraq in breach of all
international conventions, he said.
Abd
el-Salam accused Washington of exploiting the U.N. Security Council
authorities and turning U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan into an
employee who gets his orders from the U.S. State Department, putting
world security at stake.
'Oil…oil'
“Oil
was the reason for the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait and it is the first
and foremost purpose behind the American scheme to ignite war under
claims of combating terrorism,” he said.
Mohammad
Kamal Imam, Professor of Islamic law at Alexandria University, said
the foreign military build up will plague the Arab and Islamic nation
to decades to come.
Islam
opposes any attempts to destabilize the nation and terrorize its
peoples, he underlined.
All
peoples of the world must stand firmly against the American scheme of
unleashing war on Iraq, Imam said.
“What
the United States is doing lacks any legitimacy especially that there
are more than 15 countries that possess nuclear and biological
capabilities including Israel.
Israel
nuclear arsenal first
“If
Washington wants, as it claims, to preserve world stability it should
first strip Israel of its nuclear powers and stop backing the Jewish
state it its slaughtering of innocent people using U.S.-made
weapons,” Imam averred.
Egyptian
Assistant Foreign Minister Abdullah al-Ash’al stressed that amassing
troops in the Gulf to wage war on Iraq contradicts with international
legitimacy.
There
must be an international coalition to prevent the United States from
waging war on Iraq, said the Egyptian diplomat, asserting that the
American tendency to impose military solutions has become a threat to
humanity.
The
American policies will push more countries to seek possession of
nuclear weapons because world countries have come to the conviction
that possession of such weapons would deter the U.S. from attacking
them.
The
Egyptian diplomat said that most UN Security Council resolutions are
illegitimate and contradict with UN Charter.
If
a new Security Council resolution mandating the use of force against
Iraq is passed it would not be to please some Arab and European
countries that requested a UN war authorization to join the war on
Iraq.
He
warned that striking Iraq would not bring security or stability to the
Gulf region but on the contrary Iraq would be sliced and this would
spark ethnic and sectarian disputes across the region, including in
Kuwait.
The
Egyptian diplomat linked the situation in Iraq with the latest
developments in the occupied Palestinian territories, stressing that
all countries would be harmed by the war on Iraq expect for the
Zionist entity.
Mohamad
Abd el-Halim Omar, Professor of Economic Al-Azhar University,
highlighted the impact of the would-be war on the Egyptian economy.
Egypt’s
national economy is already impacted by the war before a bullet is
even fired, he stressed, citing the devaluation of the Egyptian pound.
He
also asserted that the tourism sector would loose around 73 percent of
its 3 billion dollar annual income in the event of war.
The
economics professor added that the looming-war would affect Suez Canal
revenues, investment prospects, aggravate the unemployment crisis and
double defense and security costs.
Around
30,000 Egyptians are expected to flock home from Iraq in case of a
U.S.-led war, he anticipated.