|
Related: Abbas to urge World Economic Forum to
lift siege on
Palestinians Mideast progress impossible without solving conflicts:
Mubarak
 |
| Klaus Schwab, president of the World
Economic Forum (WEF), speaks at a press conference for the WEF Middle East
Conference in Egypt's Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh on May 20, 2006.
Some 1,200 political and business leaders from 49 countries and regions
and international organizations attended the three-day conference, opened
in Sharm el-Sheikh on May 20. (Xinhua
Photo) | SHARM EL-SHEIKH, Egypt, May 20
(Xinhua by Lin Jianyang) -- The World Economic Forum (WEF) conference on
the Middle East kicked off on Saturday afternoon in Egypt's Sinai resort of
Sharm el-Sheikh, which is attended by some 1,200 political and business leaders
from 46 countries.
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak delivered an opening
speech to an audience including Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, Egyptian
Prime Minister Ahmed Nazef and WEF executive chairman Klaus Schwab.
In his opening speech, Mubarak said that the forum
came at animportant time for the Middle East, which he said had seen
transformations and achievements, aspirations and opportunities,challenges and
difficulties.
The world was changing and that all the people in the
world were facing similar challenges, such as the escalating danger of
terrorism, weapons of mass destruction and poverty, which called for more
international cooperation, said Mubarak.
"A world of challenges that must be overcome, such as the
widening gap between the rich and the poor, the political and economic imbalance
of the present global order and the escalating threat of terrorism and weapons
of mass destruction," he said.
"The winds of change in the Middle East will not bear
fruit without addressing current conflicts and tensions due to the stalemate of
the Palestinian-Israeli peace process, the situation in Iraq, the controversy
over Iran's nuclear program, the situation in Sudan's western region of Darfur
and the dispute between Syria and Lebanon," added Mubarak.
The Palestinian issue, and the Arab-Israeli peace
more broadly,will remain the core concern for peace and stability in the Middle
East, said the Egyptian president.
He said that the Palestinian-Israeli conflict should
be solved on the basis of related international resolutions, vowing that Egypt
would continue its efforts toward a settlement of the conflict.
Regarding his own country, Mubarak said that Egypt
had embarked on the path of reform for many years and that many indications
showed that Egypt was on the right path.
"Egypt's political arena is vibrant and the national
economy has regained its strength and ability to achieve high rates of growth
and employment," continued Mubarak, adding that the social safety net had also
proved its success in mitigating the adverse effects of reform.
The ruling Palestinian Islamic Resistance Movement
(Hamas) and Iran didn't attend the forum.
When asked by reporters at a Saturday press
conference over Hamas and Iran's absence, Schwab, also the WEF founder, said
that the forum only extended invitations to those highest leaders and that it
was Abbas regarding the Palestinians territories.
While on Iran, Schwab said that the WEF meeting mainly
focused on Arab countries and that Iran was now engaged in its contentious
nuclear program.
The three-day glitzy forum, held in Egypt for the
first time,is the fourth of its kind, under the theme of "The Promise of a New
Generation" this year.
The previous three annual forums have been held on
the Jordanian shore of the Dead Sea since 2003.
Egypt hopes that the high-level event, set to attract
world limelight, will show its economic reform progress and help draw in more
investment and boost trade.
Besides Abbas, a bunch of other prominent leaders and
dignitaries also attend the forum, including U.S. Deputy Secretary of State
Robert Zoellick, Israeli Deputy Prime Minister Shimon Peres and Foreign Minister
Tzipi Livni, Pakistani Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz, Malaysian Prime Minister
Abdullah Ahmad Badawi and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The Egyptian security authorities have taken
ultra-tight measures to guarantee a smooth and safe WEF conference, which came
less than on month after five suicide bomb attacks hit the Sinai peninsula in
late April.
Hundreds of Egyptian policemen were deployed and
dozens of roadblockades were set up along the main roads around the newly-build
Sharm el-Sheikh International Conference Center, where the eventis held.
At hotels accommodating participants and media staff,
security guards searched every vehicle and carefully checked identification
papers.
Egyptian Interior Minister Habib Ibrahim el-Adli has
vowed "extra-tightened security measures" facilitated by latest technology and
specially-trained personnel to ensure the conference going safe.
The forum is held in the wake of a spate of bomb
attacks on the Sinai peninsula in April.
On April 24, three suicide bombings rocked the Sinai
resort Dahab, which is located some 85 km to the north of Sharm
el-Sheikh,killing 20 people, and two others occurred at al-Gurah in northern
Sinai on April 26, killing only the bombers.
Sharm el-Sheikh, a popular tourist destination, was
hit by aseries of bombings in July 2005, with nearly 70 people killed.
The forum, modelled on the WEF's annual meeting at the
SwissAlpine resort of Davos, is a platform for regional and world leaders to
discuss economic reforms, unemployment and regional stability and peace in the
Middle East.
Incorporated as a foundation in 1971, the Geneva-based WEF is an independent international organization committed to improving the state of the world by engaging leaders in partnerships to shape global, regional and industry agendas. Enditem
|