Many Stay away as Arab Summit Opens

28/03/2006| IslamWeb

Arab leaders have convened for a summit focused on the chaos in Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict but several key leaders in the region are staying away.

King Abdullah II of Jordan became the latest Arab leader to announce he will not attend the summit in Sudan, raising the number of no shows to nine.

A Jordanian official said on Monday: "King Abdullah will not go to the Arab summit. The delegation will be led by the prime minister."

There was no immediate reason for his decision to miss Tuesday's summit in Khartoum.

An Arab League source said: "So far eight kings and heads of state have said they will not go to Khartoum and that they will be represented by their prime ministers or their foreign ministers."

Also absent will be King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia, Hosni Mubarak, the Egyptian president, King Hamad bin Issa al-Khalifa of Bahrain, Khalifa bin Zayed al-Nahayan, president of the United Arab Emirates, King Mohammed VI of Morocco, Sultan Qaboos of Oman, Jalal Talabani, the president of Iraq, and his Tunisian counterpart Zine el-Abidine bin Ali.

Shorter summit

The summit, initially scheduled for two days, will be cut to one and will focus on the situations in Darfur, Iraq and the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.

Meanwhile Hasan al-Turabi, the Sudanese opposition leader who has been frequently jailed by his government, ridiculed the summit saying the annual meeting would only remind Arabs that their leaders had no solutions.

Al-Turabi, a prominent ideologue of Islamist revivalism worldwide, told Reuters on Monday that the leaders who will attend would lose power if they ever allowed democracy in their countries.

He said Hamas's victory over Fatah secularists in Palestinian elections in January showed Arabs are looking for "an alternative course of life", a trend that is alarming to existing rulers.

Threat of democracy

"It is a wider trend, it's a phenomenon worldwide," he said.

"If there is freedom anywhere, democracy, probably most of these regimes would go... There are pressures from below and above and they are a little bit alarmed about it all.

"The old political parties - leftists, Baathists, Arab nationalists or even the old nationalist parties - they don't have a programme to address present challenges."

A former foreign minister and attorney general, al-Turabi said Arab summits had become occasions on which Arab leaders waste time on diplomatic tactics and meaningless resolutions.

Al-Turabi was detained in 2001 after a power struggle with Umar Hasan al-Bashir, the Sudanese president, and has spent much of the time since then in jail or under house arrest. Released last June, he leads the opposition party the Popular Congress.

PHOTO CAPTION

Sudanese President Omar El-Bashir, right, welcomes Jordanian King Abdullah II as he arrives for the opening session of the annual summit of the Arab League in Khartoum, Sudan Tuesday, March 28, 2006. (AP)

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