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Saddam decreed a ban on WMD, a key demand of U.N. disarmament
resolution
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BAGHDAD,
February 14 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – The National Council,
parliament, ratified Friday, February 14, a decree issued by President
Saddam Hussein banning weapons of mass destruction.
Speaker
Saadun Hammadi, who lambasted the United States and "its lies about
Iraq," opened the emergency parliamentary session shortly after
Saddam's decree was announced, reported Agence-France Presse (AFP).
The
decree was a key demand of U.N. disarmament resolution 1441.
It
is also one of three pending issues between Baghdad and the U.N. weapons
inspectors along with opening Iraqi airspace for U-2 surveillance planes
and allowing private interviews to be made with Iraqi scientists, which
both were approved by Iraq.
"It
has been decided to forbid all individuals and companies in the private
and public sectors to import, produce and manufacture nuclear, chemical
and biological weapons," Saddam said in the decree.
"All
relevant ministers, each according to his competence, have received the
order to apply this decree and take the necessary steps to impose
sanctions on those who contravene it," added the decree.
No
More Pretexts
Saddam
earlier insisted in a meeting with Iraq's number two, Ezzat Ibrahim, and
Vice President Taha Yassin Ramadan, that Iraq "is free of weapons
of mass destruction, nuclear, chemical and biological.
"The
aggressors do not have any hope at all in using this cover as a pretext
and a justification for aggression in the U.N. Security Council,"
he said.
"If,
after all this, the aggressors stage an attack, the Iraqi people and
armed forces will fight them in a spirit of jihad that will please
friends and annoy enemies," Saddam warned.
Saddam's
declaration and decree come only hours head of the anxiously awaited
report by chief U.N. weapons inspectors Hans Blix and Mohamed ElBaradei
to the U.N. Security Council.
Friday's
report, the fourth to help shape council opinion since inspections
resumed in Iraq in late November after a four-year hiatus, comes amid great
divisions within the world body members that is expected to make it
harder for Washington and London to win a resolution backing war on
Iraq.
The
United Nations has been asking Iraq to pass legislation banning the
production and development of weapons of mass destruction since the
disarmament process was launched after the 1991 Gulf War.
The
head of Iraq's National Monitoring Directorate, which liaises with U.N.
inspectors, said Thursday, February 13, that the law was supposed to be
enacted only after Iraq is relieved of U.N. sanctions in force since
1990 and long-term monitoring of its armament programs comes into force.
But
Baghdad, which insists it does not have and is not developing mass
destruction weapons, was set to speed up enactment at the request of
Blix's U.N. Monitoring, Verification and Inspection Commission and
ElBaradei's International Atomic Energy Agency, General Hossam Mohammed
Amin said.
Amin
said he expected weapons inspections to continue after Blix and
ElBaradei's report.
Iraq
Expects "Positive" Report
Baghdad
expected the crucial report to be "positive", Amin said,
noting the promise to enact the legislation on banned arms activity as
one example of Iraq's "proactive cooperation" with the
inspectors.
Iraq's
ruling Baath party called on Blix and ElBaradei not to be swayed by U.S.
pressure and present the Security Council with an "objective"
report.
They
"must today submit to the Security Council a professional and
objective report and weigh each phrase in their document (to avoid)
dangerous consequences, especially with the United States on the
look-out," the party's Ath-Thawra newspaper said.
"We
do not want to see a report in favor of Iraq but we ask that the
document is truthful, without additions or omissions," the daily
said.
It
called on the inspectors "not to amplify the negative aspects or
ignore the positive aspects in Iraq's attitude."