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TUNIS, March 28 (Xinhuanet) -- A surprise delay of an
Arab summit, announced by its host Tunisia, has sparked backlash at a collective
Arab action, some Arab diplomats and experts said on Sunday.
The move, tantamount to dropping a
bombshell to the 22-member Arab League (AL), was taken by Tunisia Saturday night
due to what it termed divergence over proposals on the reform of the Arab world.
Although AL chief Amr Moussa blamed the failure on
the performance of the current Arab system, the diplomats and experts looked
beyond and pointed to the consequences of the postponement.
"The postponement disappointed the Arab public, since
most of the Arabs pin great hope on the summit to take strong decisions
concerning dangers and threats facing the Arab world," an Egyptian diplomat told
Xinhua on condition of anonymity.
Sayed Eliwa, professor at Helwan University in Cairo,
lashed outat the current state, saying the Arab people "will probably pay a dear
price for it."
"There is a deep misunderstanding among Arab
countries. Each state concentrates on its own interests while disregarding the
whole," he told Xinhua by telephone.
"Though Arab countries have common religion, culture
and language, it is regrettable that we have no common vision for the future
like the European Union," he said.
The indefinite postponement of the summit originally
due on March 29-30, the first to be held after the US-led war on Iraq, wasalso
the first such in the league's 59-year history.
Some Arab foreign ministers, who have been here over
the past two days to prepare for the summit, have reportedly rejected a Tunisian
proposal on pursuing democratic reforms in the Arab world,dealing the last straw
of the sudden decision.
Proposing that human rights be protected and women's
status enhanced, Tunisia has called for tolerance, exclusion of extremism and
inter-civilization dialogue.
According to Egypt's official MENA news agency,
Tunisian ForeignMinister Al-Habib bin Yahia walked out of the night session to
takea phone call, and then returned and announced that President Zine al-Abidine
Ben Ali had decided to postpone the summit.
When Moussa and several ministers asked bin Yahia to
arrange an urgent meeting with the president, the minister only said, "The
president got a flu and could not receive you."
The decision stunned all, as the ministers were
making progress toward reaching an agreement on questions that divided them,
notably reform in Arab states and policy on the Israeli-Palestinianconflict,
MENA said.
The summit preparations had been in trouble for days,
given the reluctance of some AL members for attendance and low-key
representation of Gulf states.
During the two-day ministerial meeting, delegates
reached unanimity on Iraq, being poised to reiterate a call for a quick
withdrawal of occupation troops and transfer of power to Iraqis, and for the
United Nations to play a pivotal role in post-war Iraq,according to a draft
statement.
On the Palestinian cause, Arab countries had been
expected to condemn Israel's aggression and its construction of a separation
wall and to offer 330 million US dollars in aid to the Palestinian National
Authority (PNA), which is to be paid in a monthly installment of 55 million
dollars as of April.
Moreover, some Arab countries, led by Syria, strongly
oppose offering any more peace proposal to Israel, which assassinated Hamas
spiritual leader Sheikh Ahmed Yassin, a 67-year-old quadriplegic man bound with
his wheelchair, in a missile attack on Monday.
They also dubbed talk about peace with Israel as
"time-wasting,"while some countries, on the other hand, stressed the need to
mergean Arab initiative which offers normal relations and security to Israel in
return for its withdrawal to the pre-1967 border into a US-sponsored peace plan,
or the roadmap.
Syria and Libya also traded bad words against each
other concerning weapons of mass destruction, sources close to the meeting said.
As for reform of the Arab world, the ministers failed
to reach consensus on proposals, submitted by Egypt, Jordan, Yemen, Qatar and
Tunisia, which had been incorporated into a single draft document.
To ward off any unhealthy fallout, some Arab
countries have engaged in an intense diplomacy to reschedule the summit.
On Sunday, Egypt, where the league is headquartered,
offered to host the summit.
"Egypt welcomes the convening of the summit in the
country of the headquarters of the Arab League at the earliest possible time
that can be agreed on," said a statement, issued by Egyptian President Hosni
Mubarak's office, on Sunday.
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal, who has been
in Tunisia for the ministerial meeting, is due in Cairo for talks with
Mubarakover the postponement.
"Faisal will meet with his Egyptian counterpart Ahmed
Maher on an Egyptian offer to hold the summit at the Arab League headquarters in
Cairo," MENA said.
Echoing Helwan University's Eliwa, Taha Khalil,
researcher of the Egyptian National Center for Middle East Studies, told Xinhua,
"The Arab League will carry on, though it is a weak forum."Enditem
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