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Gaddafi Attacks Security Council, Describing The UN A Form Of Terrorism
16 July 2009
Al-Jazeera -- Muammar Gaddafi, Libya's leader, has described the UN's Security Council as a form of "terrorism" at a meeting of 118 mostly developing nations in Sharm El-Sheikh, Egypt. He told the 15th summit of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) on Wednesday he would demand a seat for the African Union in the Security Council to represent its member states. "The Security Council is terrorism," he said. The UN body "does not represent us, it is monopolised by a few countries that are permanent members. "This represents a danger toward international peace. We have been harmed (by) all sorts of harm from the Security Council, it has become a sword over our necks." The NAM is the largest grouping of countries outside of the UN, made up of mostly African, Asian and Latin American nations. The summit, held every three years, will this year focus on "international solidarity for peace and development". Significant meetings are taking place on the sidelines, including one between the prime ministers of Pakistan and India over stalled peace talks. 'New world order' Raul Castro, the Cuban president, in his opening speech, issued a call to create a financial system that is fairer to developing nations in light of the global recession. "As usual, the wealthy countries were the source of the current crisis, which was affected by the ... illogic of the international economic order that depends on blind market principles and consumption, and wealth of the few," he said. "So we call for the creation of a new international financial and economic structure that is based on actual participation of all states, and especially developing states." Hosni Mubarak, Egypt's president, also called for a new "international political, economic and trade order" to be established. "A more just and balanced order that prevents discrimination and double standards, achieves the interests of all, takes into account concerns of developing countries and establishes democratic dealings between rich and poor states," Mubarak said. While the summit is expected to largely focus on the economic crisis, Sheila Sisulu, from the World Food Programme, told Al Jazeera she hopes it also addresses the plight of those most vulnerable to food insecurity. She said while the G8 summit earlier this month in Italy pledged help to make poor nations become self-sufficient, there would "always be people ... whose food security will not be addressed by agricultural development". Sisulu felt the most vulnerable should always be catered for. "At the moment, with high food prices, we at the World Food Programme are only 25 per cent funded this year," she said. India-Pakistan contacts Pakistani and Indian foreign ministry officials held a meeting in the Red Sea resort town on Tuesday in advance of their prime ministers' meeting, according to an Indian official. In what will be the second high-level contact between the two nations in eight months, Manmohan Singh, the Indian prime minister, and Yusuf Raza Gilani, his Pakistani counterpart, are expected to hold talks on Thursday. New Delhi and Islamabad's already fraught relations worsened after last November's bombings in the Indian commercial capital, which killed nearly 170 people. The Mumbai attacks destroyed a fragile peace process launched in 2004 to resolve all outstanding issues of conflict between the neighbours, including a territorial dispute over the divided Himalayan territory of Kashmir. In another set of diplomatically significant meetings, the Egyptian and Iranian foreign ministers have held three rounds of talks this week, the two countries' diplomats said on Tuesday. Formal diplomatic ties were severed in 1979 when Egypt signed a peace deal with Israel. An Iranian diplomat said the talks between Ahmed Aboul Gheit, the Egyptian foreign minister, and Manouchehr Mottaki, his Iranian counterpart, took place in "a positive and cordial atmosphere". Hossam Zaki, the Egyptian foreign minister's spokesman, said the two countries have had their differences but expressed hope that they could work together for "stability in the region."
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