Abdullah should present Ministerial statement in Senate tomorrow to
explain what international initiatives Malaysia, as Chair of NAM, proposes
to take in the shaping of a new international architecture of a post-Iraq
world
Media Statement
by Lim Kit Siang
(Petaling Jaya,
Sunday): Acting
Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has rightly expressed
Malaysia's concern at the anarchy that had descended upon Iraq, with
widespread looting in full view of American forces which did little to stop
the looters.
Abdullah should summon the United States Ambassador to Malaysia and the
United Kingdom High Commissioner to Malaysia tomorrow to express the horror
of Malaysians at the chaos and anarchy in parts of Baghdad and Iraq as a
result of the power vacuum arising from the disappearance of the Saddam
Hussein regime, and to remind the US and UK governments in the most forcible
way possible of their responsibility to establish law and order, avert
civilian catastrophe and humanitarian disaster in Iraq as occupying powers
under the Geneva conventions.
Abdullah should convey this urgent message not only as Acting Prime
Minister, but also as Chair of the Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) during the
leave-of-absence of the Prime Minister, Datuk Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad.
Abdullah should also present a Ministerial statement in Senate tomorrow to
explain what international initiatives Malaysia, as Chair of NAM, proposes
to take in the shaping of the new international architecture of a post-Iraq
world - or whether this is going to be left entirely to the whims and
fancies of the victorious US Bush administration.
NAM must be in the forefront to take pro-active measures to address the new
global scenario and not allow the United States, after using Iraq as a
test-bed for its pernicious doctrine of pre-emptive military attack, to
again have another occasion to spell out a pre-emptive doctrine in shaping a
"new international order"!
The single most urgent challenge facing NAM is how to help restore
international law and order and re-establish the primacy of multilateralism
over unilateralism, and salvage the United Nations and NAM from being
completely marginalized by the United States in international affairs.
One important step to prevent such marginalization is to ensure
the urgent installation in Iraq, under the authority of the United Nations
and in conformity with a Security Council resolution, of a transitional
government fully representative of the Iraqi people.
There is a dangerous mood of despondency and despair in the Arab world, not
so much at the defeat of Saddam Hussein by the technological and military
superiority of the US, but at the ignominous collapse of what is regarded by
many as the last Arab hope to resist American neo-colonialism.
Journalists, political analysts, government officials and diplomats are
searching for the answer to the question as to whether such despondency and
despair would translate themselves into the 100 Osama bin Ladens feared by
Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak or into a new Middle East which bows to
American might.
The answer might be both, with the American might and hegemony in the Middle
East feeding resentments, hatreds and despair in the Arab streets leading to
100 Osama bin Ladens, especially if the so-called "reconstruction" of
post-Saddam Iraq proves to be nothing more than an American "privatization"
of Iraqi oil and resources, with no development, democratization and
independence for Iraq.
(13/4/2003)
*
Lim Kit Siang, DAP National
Chairman
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