Special report:
Palestine-Israel Conflicts
RABAT, Jan. 15 (Xinhua) -- King Mohammed VI of Morocco said he will not
attend in person the Arab summits due in Doha and Kuwait this week, blaming Arab
leaders for squabbling on trivial matters that eclipse the situation in
Palestine.
The monarch deplored the "unprecedented level" of a "depressing Arab
situation," the official MAP news agency reported Thursday quoting a press
release of the king's office.
The scathingly-worded press release lashed out at Arab leaders, regretting
that "the mere fact of proposing the convening of an Arab summit now gives rise
to squabbling and outbidding tactics, even disputes between Arab countries,"
which eclipse the vital causes of the Ummah, particularly the Palestinian
question.
Qatar has recently called for an extraordinary summit to examine the
situation in Gaza, but Egypt and Saudi Arabia refused to attend, saying they can
look into the matter on the sidelines of the Arab economic summit due on
Saturday in Kuwait.
During the 19-day-old brutal Israeli offensive on Gaza, over 1,030 were
killed and nearly 5,000 were injured.
The sovereign denounced what he called attempts to secure "exclusive
leadership," of the Arab world or "create specific axes or zones of influence."
The press release bluntly said that regardless of the external aggression,
the problem lies with the Arabs themselves, "therefore any solution to the
problem is to start with them," it said, calling for settling inter-Arab
problems.
Solving the Arab-Israeli conflict "requires a precise Arab strategy,
efficient and rational action, concrete solidarity as well as a unified stance
and the rejection of divisions and narrow interests.
The monarch underlined that the tragic situation in Gaza is calling out to
the conscience of the Arab nation and the entire
humanity.