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ANKARA: Islamic Nations Need 'United Stance' To Become A Global Forc

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  • ANKARA: Islamic Nations Need 'United Stance' To Become A Global Forc

    ISLAMIC NATIONS NEED 'UNITED STANCE' TO BECOME A GLOBAL FORCE

    Hurriyet Daily News
    Thursday, January 28, 2010

    Turkey and other countries in the Islamic world need to change their
    Cold War-era outlook if they want to play a prominent role in the
    future, according to the message delivered at a forum in Istanbul.

    The three-day meeting, titled "Peaceful Civilization and Cooperation,"
    opened with a strong call to forge a common stance in the new world
    order. The forum has been organized by the Turkish Asian Center for
    Strategic Studies, or TACSS, an Ankara-based think-tank.

    TACSS chairman Suleyman Å~^ensoy warned that Turkey and other Islamic
    countries need to overcome the barrier of the mentalities they held
    during the Cold War era.

    "If they continue with their current perceptions, Islamic countries
    will be unable to forge a claim for themselves for the next five
    decades or 100 years while power is shared in the new world order,"
    he said.

    According to Å~^ensoy, this transformation period, in which a new
    world order is being created, also provides new opportunities for
    more cooperation among the member states of the Organization of the
    Islamic Conference, or OIC.

    "The Islamic world did not have a common culture to take a joint step
    during the Cold War era, because they needed to balance their policies
    according to principles of their own blocs. This new era has provided
    a chance for new cooperation in the Islamic world," Å~^ensoy said.

    The situation is not all optimistic, however. "Our world is going
    through a very complicated period where the fault line between the
    Muslim world and the Western world is becoming more visible and even
    cracking," said Professor Ekmeleddin Ä°hsanoglu, the secretary-general
    of the OIC. "New world powers are emerging, and problems related to
    underdevelopment are plaguing many parts of the Muslim world while
    extremism and violence are on the rise."

    A political figure from Russia agreed that today's world does not
    have a peaceful order.

    "We have growing potential for conflict all over the world. The number
    of conflicts is growing. At the same time, there is a general trend
    to employ force rather than peaceful political methods to resolve
    this conflict," said Valery Dimitrievich Nikolaenko, a former Russian
    deputy foreign minister.

    Nikolaenko, who is also the deputy dean of the Russian Foreign
    Ministry's Diplomacy Academy, said the multi-polar world order has
    provided regional organizations with more power and more roles,
    and that their leaders have tried to play increasing roles in the
    solving of problems.

    "The regional powers and organizations want to resolve their issues
    by themselves, without interference from outside. This gives bigger
    potential to Islamic countries and Islamic organizations such as the
    OIC," he said.

    "We in Russia are trying to be friends with Islamic countries. We are
    aware of the political and economic importance of the Islamic world,"
    Nikolaenko added. "We should cooperate to solve conflicts. We should
    work to build peaceful civilization and cooperation."

    A politician from the Turkish Cypriot administration called on Islamic
    countries to take braver steps to end the isolation of northern
    Cyprus and for all sanctions against Turkish Cypriots to be removed
    unconditionally.

    "The Islamic world should be united and take a common stance for
    the sanctions to be removed unconditionally. It is time for Muslim
    states to act jointly. We are now more hopeful as a result of Turkey's
    improved relations with Muslim countries," said Hakkı Altun, a former
    deputy prime minister of northern Cyprus.

    An official from the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry said the Istanbul
    meeting was an opportunity to discuss and share views about wider
    issues that concern not only Islamic countries, but the entire
    international community.

    "We hope to gain the support and assistance of international
    organizations of Islamic countries as well as international forces
    like the United Nations to solve the Karabakh conflict," said Hussein
    Husseinov, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry's secretary for political
    affairs to the European Union, referring to the ongoing dispute between
    his country and Armenia. "It can be solved through more coordinated
    efforts led by the Islamic countries and specifically Turkey."
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