CAIRO, Nov. 11 (Xinhua) -- A four-way summit meeting
involving leaders of Egypt, Iraq, Sudan and Yemen was held here Sunday to tackle
pressing Arab issues ahead of an upcoming U.S.-sponsored Mideast peace
conference.
At the summit meeting, or a working lunch, Egyptian
President Hosni Mubarak and his Iraqi, Sudanese and Yemeni counterparts, Jalal
Talabani, Omer al-Bashir and Ali Abdullah Saleh, discussed the overall Arab
situation and the latest developments in the region, Egyptian presidential
spokesman Suleiman Awad told reporters.
 |
|
Iraq's President Jalal Talabani (L-R)
and his counterparts from Yemen Ali Abdullah Saleh, Egypt Hosni Mubarak
and Sudan Omar Hassan al-Bashir talk during a meeting at Koba Palace in
Cairo Nov. 11, 2007. (Xinhua Photo)
|
The
summit focused on the situation in Iraq, Sudan and the U.S.-host Mideast peace
conference to be held in the last week of November in Annapolis, Maryland, Awad
said.
According to the spokesman, President Mubarak
attaches great attention to the success of political process in Iraq in a way
that would stop the bloodshed and restore the war-torn country's sovereignty,
independence and territorial integrity.
Mubarak pointed out that the main condition for the
success of the political process is to steer clear of all sectarian conflicts,
as there is no difference between Arabs and Kurds or Shia and Sunni Muslim.
Meanwhile, the leaders called on the Iraqi and
Turkish sides to exercise self-restraint so as not to give the Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) the chance to pit the two neighboring states against each
other.
Turkey has been considering a cross-border incursion
into northern Iraq after PKK attacks over the past few weeks have left 47
civilians and soldiers dead, but so far it is still trying on diplomatic fronts
and holding back from major military actions.
Earlier on Sunday, Mubarak met with Bashir on the
latest developments in Sudan and the two presidents discuss efforts exerted to
achieve peace in Darfur and the implementation of the peace agreement.
Egypt hopes the comprehensive peace agreement will be
applied in good faith as crisis between the country's north and south is on the
way of a breakthrough.
It should be widened to involve a similar peace in
the Sudanese western region of Darfur and another with the Eastern Front to
achieve a comprehensive peace and unity in Sudan, Egypt urges.
As for the Mideast peace conference, the summit held
that the conference will not succeed if it returns to the roadmap for peace that
was launched in 2003, which has since failed to make any progress on the road to
peace.
The leaders call for a joint political document by
Palestinians and Israelis with good intentions to provide a strong basis upon
which the Annapolis conference could be launched as a framework for
Palestinian-Israeli talks and within a specific time frame so as not to continue
to negotiate for ever.
In order to make Annapolis conference a success,
diplomatic coordination is still under way, specially among Arab nations.
President Mubarak met with King Abdullah of Saudi
Arabia on Sunday for the second time after their talks on Saturday.
He is also expected to meet Jordanian King Abdullah
II and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on developments on Mideast peace
process ahead of the Annapolis conference.
In this regard, visiting European Union foreign
policy chief Javier Solana is also due to meet with Abbas in Cairo on Sunday and
with Egyptian officials on Monday.
Egypt is seeking to unify Arab ranks ahead of the
Mideast peace conference, which is expected to include Israel, the Palestinian
National Authority and some of their Arab neighbors to help restart the stalled
Mideast peace talks, said media reports.