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DOCUMENT No.
9
Speech By Prime Minister The Honorable Dato Seri Dr. Mahathir Mohamad At The
Opening Session Of The Xiii Summit Meeting Of The Non-Aligned Movement At
Putra World Trade Centre, Kuala Lumpur On MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24 2003
Date: 24 February 2003
1.
On behalf of the Government and
People of Malaysia, may I extend a very warm welcome to all of you to Kuala
Lumpur to this XIII Summit of the Non-Aligned Movement.
2.
It is indeed a great honour for
Malaysia to host this Summit Meeting and to assume the chairmanship of the
Movement.
3.
As the host, Malaysia is
gratified at the high level of participation in spite of the uncertainties of
the international situation today. This clearly demonstrates our continued and
abiding faith in, and commitment to our Movement and our collective wish and
determination to strengthen our unity and cohesion
4.
I take this opportunity to pay a special tribute to the
Republic of South Africa, in particular His Excellency President Thabo M'beki,
for his and his country's outstanding stewardship of our Movement for the past
four years a little longer than they had bargained for when they assumed the
Chairmanship at our Summit Meeting in Durban. We congratulate them for the
admirable way the Republic of South Africa has held high the banner of
NAM despite cynicism about its relevance.
5. We are also gratified that under South Africa's
leadership our Movement has intensified the serious and critical examination
of our organisation and has initiated some important steps towards its
revitalisation a process which Malaysia will pursue with the help and
cooperation of the members of NAM.
6. This Summit Meeting in Kuala Lumpur, the first to
be held in the new century, indeed the new millennium, is taking place at a
most crucial time. The world now lives in fear. We are afraid of everything.
We are afraid of flying, afraid of certain countries; afraid of bearded Asian
men, afraid of the shoes airline passengers wear; of letters and parcels, of
white powder. The countries allegedly harbouring terrorists, their people,
innocent or otherwise are afraid too. They are afraid of war, of being killed
and maimed by bombs being dropped on them, by missiles fired from hundreds of
miles away by unseen forces. They are afraid because they would become the
collaterals to be killed because they get in the way of the destruction of
their countries.
7. The preparations and the measures taken to ensure security go on
frantically. Trillions of dollars are spent by the world for new weapons, new
technology, new strategy; the deployment of forces and inspectors worldwide.
Those who cannot afford these security measures must simply await their fate
and trust in God. Yet despite all these, terrorist attacks have taken place
where they are least expected, killing the collaterals again. There is still
no guarantee that the well dressed, clean shaven family man next door might
not become another hijacker, crashing his aircraft into buildings and killing
collaterals.
8. In the meantime the economy of the world has slowed
down and in some instances has been reversed, with huge deficits burdening
countries. Jobs are lost and poverty is increasing even in the rich countries.
No new investments in foreign countries or at home. With the threat of war oil
prices have shot up, increasing further the economic and social burdens of
the poor countries.
9. Aid for the poor has practically stopped and loans
are not available as the poor countries defaulted and defaulted again.
10. Truly the world is in a terrible mess, a state that
is worse than during the East West confrontation, the Cold War. All the great
hopes following the end of the Cold War have vanished. And with the terrorists
and the anti terrorists fumbling blindly in their fight against each other,
normalcy will not return for quite a long while.
11. Surely at some stage we must ask ourselves why this
is happening to the world. Why is there terrorism? Is it true that the Muslims
are born terrorists because of the teachings of a prophet who was a terrorist?
How do we explain the pogroms, the inquisitions and the holocaust which
characterised Christian Europe for almost 2000 years? Why did the Jews choose
to seek haven in Muslim countries whenever Christian Europeans persecute them?
Do people seek safety in the land of terrorists? Does not
sound very likely.
12. The Christians too were terrorised, not by Muslims
but by fellow Christians who condemned them as heretics. They were persecuted,
tortured, burnt at the stakes for their beliefs and forced to migrate. Seems
that, the Muslims did not have a monopoly of terrorism, certainly not on the
scale of the holocaust, the pogroms and the inquisition.
13. So it cannot be that Muslims are the sole cause of
all these problems. If they are not then is it a clash of civilisation, a
clash of the Muslim civilisation against the Judea Christian civilisation,
that is responsible.
14. Frankly I do not think so. Frankly I think it is
because of a revival of the old European trait of wanting to dominate the
world. And the expression of this trait invariably involves injustice and
oppression of people of other ethnic origins and colours.
15. If we care to think back, there was no systematic
campaign of terror outside Europe until the Europeans and the Jews created a
Jewish state out of Palestinian land. Incidentally terrorism was first used by
the Haganah and the Irgun Zvai Leumi to persuade the British to set up Israel.
The Palestinians were actually ejected from their homes and their country and
forced to live in miserable refugee camps for more than 50 years now.
16. It is the struggle of the Palestinians to regain
their land that has precipitated, first conventional wars, then civil protest
and eventually violent demonstrations. The Israelis demanded European support
to atone for European crimes against them in the past. In desperation the
Palestinians finally resorted to what is described as acts of terror. Rightly,
this is condemned by the world. But the world does not condemn as acts of
terror the more terrifying acts of the Israelis; the massacres in Sabra and
Shatila, the shooting and killing of children, the use of depleted uranium
coated bullets, the bulldozing of Palestinian homes while the occupants are
still in them, the helicopter gunships etc. And Israel is now threatening to
use nuclear weapons.
17. This blatant double standards is what infuriates Muslims,
infuriates them to the extent of launching their own terror attacks. If Iraq
is linked to the Al Qaeda, is it not more logical to link the expropriation of
Palestinian land and the persecution and oppression of the Palestinians with
September 11? It is not religious differences which angered the attackers of
the World Trade Centre. It is simply sympathy and anger over the expropriation
of Palestinian land, over the injustice and the oppression of the
Palestinians, and Muslims everywhere. If the innocent people who died in the
attack on Afghanistan, and those who have been dying from lack of food and
medical care in Iraq, are considered collaterals, are not the 3,000 who died
in New York and the 200 in Bali also just collaterals whose deaths are
necessary for the operations to succeed?
18. Actually the life of any human being is sacred, no
matter if the person is a friend or an enemy. That is why war is not a
solution. A contest based on who can kill more people in order to establish
who is the Victor and who the loser, worst still in order to determine who is
right and who is wrong is primitive and does not speak well of the so called
high level of civilisation we have achieved. The greatness of a nation should
be based on a culture that values high moral qualities, aesthetics, learning
and advancements in the sciences. Unfortunately thousands of years after the
stone age we still measure the greatness of a nation by the capacity to
slaughter the greatest number of people.
19. But the oppression and injustice is not confined to
waging war and killing people; there is oppression in ideological propagation.
We are now allowed only a democratic system of Government. We admit it is by
far the best system of Governments. But applying sanctions, starving people,
denying access to medicine in order to force the acceptance of democracy
hardly seem to be democratic. Actually millions have died because they have
not converted to this new religion. And millions more are suffering because
they are unable to make democracy work, because of the resulting anarchy.
20. Relieved of the need to compete with the Communists, the capitalist
free traders have ceased to show a friendly face. Their greed knows no bounds.
They want countries which had fought hard to gain independence, to give up
that independence, to do away with their borders, to allow the capitalists
free access to do what they like to the economies of these countries. They
call this free competition. As they merge and acquire each other, they become
monstrous giants against whom the small businesses in the developing countries
will not be able to compete. What is the meaning of competition if you cannot
win at all. In the end a few of these monsters will control the economy of the
whole world.
21. The sad thing is that they are not above cheating
and corruption. And we know they can fail. We have seen how spectacularly they
fail losing 100 billion dollars in one year. And that is only one corporation.
22. Then there are the rogue currency traders who
destroyed the economies of half the world, threw tens of millions out of work,
bankrupted banks and thousands of businesses, cause the collapse of
Governments and precipitated anarchy; all so that half a dozen individuals can
make billions for themselves.
23. Now the rich give no more aid. They do not lend
either. And all the time the international agencies they control try to
strangle the debt laden poor countries which had been attacked by their greedy
market manipulators.
24. The disparities between rich and poor widen daily.
The rich have per capita incomes of more than 30,000 US Dollars, the poor only
300 US Dollars. Still the rich want to squeeze out literally the last drop of
blood from the poor.
25. It is this which plague the word today, this oppression of the poor
by the rich; this injustice, this inequality. To nib salt into the wound the
poor are always being told that they lack transparency and good governance,
they don't respect human rights, they don't uphold freedom of speech, freedom
of the press and so on and so forth, when in fact it is the rich who lack
transparency, who do not respect human rights, who curb our rights to speak
the truth about what they are doing, who use their media to hide their
misdeeds and spread lies. How else can we interpret the operations of the
hedge funds and the currency traders, sanctions and the systematic bombings of
certain countries, the impoverishment of the already poor, and the censorship
of news as well as distorted and fabricated reports about the south.
26. The fact is that the poor countries have been and
are being oppressed and terrorised by the rich countries. Naturally the poor
are bitter and angry and have lost faith in justice and honour. And the last
straw which caused them to resort to futile and destructive terror attacks is
the blatant support for state terrorism as practised by Israel and others. If
Israeli terrorism is a response to Palestinian terrorism, then Palestinian
terrorism, and terror acts by their sympathisers must be due to the expulsion
of Palestinians from their land, the further occupation of Palestinian
territory and the open support for Israeli intransigence and terrorism by the
Europeans. But the developing countries must admit that we are also
responsible for the mess the world is in today. We have not used our
independence and freedom to develop our countries for the good of our people.
Instead we have been busy overthrowing our Governments, setting up new
Governments which in turn would be overthrown. We have even killed our own
people by the millions. And frequently, frustrated with anarchic democracy we
resort to autocratic Governments, exposing ourselves to much vilification.
27. The result of this confrontation between the haves
and the have nots, the developed and the developing is a word that is
practically ungovernable. Despite all the advances in science and technology,
the world is in a terrible state. With more than enough food to feed the six
billion people of the world, fully one in six is actually underfed, starving,
with hundreds dying daily.
28. Since Sept 11, the rich and the powerful have become enraged with
the poor half of the world. And their extreme measures to ensure security for
themselves have only amplified the anger of the oppressed poor. Both sides are
now in a state of blind anger and are bent on killing each other, on war.
29. War solves nothing. War is primitive. Today's war is
more primitive than stone age wars. The targets are not the fighters, the
combatants. The target is the ordinary civilians, the women, children and old
people. Whether it is terror attacks or military action, these are the
victims.
30. In primitive wars the carnage is witnessed by the
warriors. While the suicidal terrorists die with each attack, the great
warriors who press the buttons see nothing of the mangled bodies, the heads
and limbs which are torn from disemboweled bodies, the blood and the gore of
the innocent people who an instant before were living people like them. And
because they don't see, the button pressing warriors and the people who
commanded them go back to enjoy a hearty meal, watch TV shows or moral
boosting troop entertainers and then retire to their cosy beds for a good
sleep. Tomorrow they would make more sorties, to carpet bomb more children,
women and old people or they would press more buttons to send missiles to tear
off more heads and limbs.
31. War is about slaughtering people. Newer and more
brutal weapons are being invented to kill more people more efficiently. And
now there is talk that the use of nuclear weapons is justified. Is it because
the people to be slaughtered are chromatically different? Is it because they
cannot hit back?
32. Our meeting here today is a meeting of Heads of
States and Heads of Governments. We must admit that our organisation has not
been as effective as it should be. We may want to remain uninvolved and to
avoid incurring the displeasure of the powerful countries. But our people are
getting restless. They want us to do something. If we don't then they will,
and they will go against us. They will take things into their own hands.
Unable to mount a conventional war they will resort to guerrilla war, to
terrorism, against us and against those they consider to be their oppressors.
33. They cannot be ignored any longer. We cannot
incarcerate them all for we do not always know who they are or where they are.
34. Sept 11, has demonstrated to the world that acts of
terror even by a dozen people can destabilise the whole world completely, put
fear into the hearts of everyone, make them afraid of their own shadows.
35. But their acts have also removed all the restraint
in the countries of the north. They now no longer respect borders,
international laws or even simple moral values. And they are now talking of
wars, of the use of military conquests in order to change Governments. They
are even talking of using nuclear weapons.
36. It is no longer just a war against terrorism. It is
in fact a war to dominate the world i.e. the chromatically different world. We
are now being accused of harbouring terrorists, of being Axis of Evil, etc.
NAM has a lot of problems and issues which it must tackle. But at the moment
the most important threat that we face is the tendency of the powerful to wage
war when faced with opposition to the spread of their dominance. We cannot
fight a war with them.
37. Fortunately many of their people are also sick of
war. They have come out in their millions to protest the warlike policies of
their leaders. We must join them. We must join their struggle with all the
moral force that we can command.
38. War must be outlawed. That will have to be our struggle for now. We
must struggle for justice and freedom from oppression, from economic hegemony.
But we must remove the threat of war first. With this Sword of Democles
hanging over our heads we can never succeed in advancing the interests of our
countries.
39. War must therefore be made illegal. The enforcement
of this must be by multilateral forces under the control of the United
Nations. No single nation should be allowed to police the world, least of all
to decide what action to take, when.
40. Globalisation must not be confined to the
exploitation of the wealth of the earth only. Globalisation must include the
multilateral protection of countries threatened by war or hegemony.
41. There must be a new world order in which power is
shared equitably by all. The United Nations must be reformed. It must no
longer be bound by the results of a world war fought more than half a century
ago. Everyone must disarm. Weapons of mass destruction must be disallowed for
all. And there should be no more research into making conventional weapons
more lethal.
42. If it is right for an international agency in a globalised world to
oversee human rights, business practices and the kind of democracy practised
by countries, then a truly International Agency beholden only to the United
Nations General Assembly should oversee the military budget of all countries,
big and small. Trading in arms must come under United Nations supervision.
Brutal ethnic cleansing must be stopped by a multinational standing army.
43. When Japan was defeated, it was allowed to spend
only one percent of its GDP on its armed forces. If such a condition can be
imposed on Japan, why cannot it be imposed on all countries?
44. In the struggle to outlaw war and control arms,
nuclear as well as conventional, NAM will find growing support from among many
people in the North. It is a daunting task nevertheless. But unless we take
the moral high ground now, we will wait in vain for the powerful North to
voluntarily give up slaughtering people in the name of national interest.
45. Again I would like to say that NAM must struggle to
outlaw war. NAM must struggle to outlaw nuclear weapons. NAM must struggle to
stop the research and development of more and more lethal so called
conventional weapons. NAM must struggle to control the arms trade.
46. We must work for a new world order, where democracy
is not confined to the internal governance of states only but to the
governance of the world. We must work for the revival of the United Nations
and multilateralism. We must work to do away or modify the powers of the
victors of a war fought half a century ago.
47. We know we are weak. But we also know we have allies
in the North. They too want the abolition of wars, the slaughter of people for
whatever reason. They may not agree with us in everything. But in the
opposition to war very many will be with us. They are ready to oppose their
warlike leaders. We must work with them.
48. This then is our struggle. We are not irrelevant. We
are not anachronistic. We have a vision, the vision to build a new world
order, a world order that is more equitable, more just; a world order which is
above all free from the age old belief that killing people is right, that it
can solve the problems of relations between nations.
49. For all these we must revitalise the Non Aligned
Movement. And that vitality can only come from our closing ranks and acting
together.
50. I thank you for giving me this opportunity to speak before this
august assembly. Malaysia pledges to work vigorously to oppose war including
the war against Iraq and to ensure the success of this our Movement.
Prime Minister's Office, PUTRAJAYA.
http://www.nam.gov.za/media/030225na.htm>
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