Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Terrorism' has besieged Islamic world, says President Musharraf

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Terrorism' has besieged Islamic world, says President Musharraf

    GEO.TV
    July 10 2004

    Terrorism' has besieged Islamic world, says President Musharraf

    BAKU: Terrorism is holding the Muslim world hostage, Pakistan's
    President Pervez Musharraf said on Friday on the eve of his official
    visit to the former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan.

    But, the West must also change its attitude to the Islamic world --
    and in particular persuade Israel to withdraw from Palestinian
    territory -- if global terrorism is to be crushed, he said.

    The Pakistani leader made the remarks in a wide-ranging speech about
    the challenges facing the Islamic world during his state visit to
    Azerbaijan, a mainly Muslim state which has forged close links with
    Islamabad.

    "Unfortunately the Islamic world is faced with many problems. It is
    as if the Islamic world is facing a storm," the 60-year-old
    president, speaking through an interpreter, told a special session of
    the Azeri parliament.

    "It is also unfortunate that terrorism does harm to Muslim
    countries... The tactics they use, terrorism, car bombs, executions
    and other dirty methods, damage our great religion. Today they are
    holding our societies hostage."

    "They must understand that they cannot solve the problems of the
    Islamic world this way...I call on them to return to the true path."

    But he said the West, and particularly the United States, had to
    assist the Islamic world in stamping out terrorism.

    Western nations could do this by helping Islamic countries develop
    their economies. The West should also help resolve a series of
    conflicts in which Muslim communities have found their territory
    under occuppation, he said.

    He listed Pakistan's dispute with India over Kashmir, Azerbaijan's
    lingering conflict with its neighbour Armenia over the enclave of
    Nagorno-Karabakh and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

    "The Palestinian problem must be resolved in a just way," the
    Pakistani leader said. "Israel must accept reality and return to the
    framework of its 1967 borders."

    "If we are able to put this into practise, then the world will be
    able to root out extremism, militarism and terrorism," Musharraf
    added. "If the status quo remains, then that will not lead to the
    resolution of these problems."

    Musharraf, an army chief who came to power in a bloodless coup five
    years ago, is himself walking a delicate tightrope on Islamic issues.

    After the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks on the United States,
    he supported the US-led operation to overthrow the Taliban regime in
    Afghanistan, and root out terrorist groups.

    But that support for Washington has made him a villain in the eyes of
    many Muslim radicals. He has since been the target of several
    near-miss assassination attempts.

    Musharraf was speaking on the second day of his visit to Azerbaijan,
    a country of eight million mostly Shia Muslims bordering Russia and
    Iran.

    On Thursday, Musharraf signed a package of documents on trade and
    security cooperation between the two countries. He said that in
    Azerbaijan, Islamabad
    had found a steadfast international ally.

    Later Friday, Musharraf is due to go on a walkabout in the Azeri
    capital, Baku, and attend a concert in his honour at the State
    Philharmonic Hall.

    Musharraf and his entourage are scheduled to leave Azerbaijan on
    Saturday morning.
Working...
X