23 September 2011

Iran (Islamic Republic of) H.E. Mr. Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, President


Statement Summary: 
MAHMOUD AHMADINEJAD, President of Iran, stressed that most nations were unhappy with the current international circumstances, and that — despite general aspirations to promote peace, progress and fraternity — wars, mass murder widespread poverty and socio-economic and political crises continued to infringe upon the rights and sovereignty of nations. Approximately 3 billion people lived on less than $2.5 per day, and 40 per cent of the poorest 
in the world shared only 5 per cent of its income. The root cause of the world’s current problems must be sought in the prevailing international order and the way the world was governed, he said, asking a series of questions about the “arrogant slave masters and colonial Powers” that dominated global decision-making. Among those, he asked who had imposed colonialism around the globe, and who had imposed terror and mass murder on Palestinian people and on countries in the Middle East region.
He asked, among other questions, who had used the “mysterious September 11 incident” as a pretext to attack Afghanistan and Iraq, killing, injuring and displacing millions of people. Whose military spending exceeded $1,000 billion dollars annually — more than the military budgets of all countries in the world combined? Who dominated the policy-making establishments of the world’s economy, as well as the Security Council, which was ostensibly responsible for safeguarding international security? “Do these arrogant Powers really have the competence and ability to run or govern the world?”, he asked. “Can the flower of democracy bloom from [North Atlantic Treaty Organization’s] missiles, bombs and guns?”
By using their imperialistic media network, they threatened anyone who questioned the Holocaust and the 11 September event with sanctions and military action, he said. Last year, when the need to form a fact-finding team to undertake an investigation concerning the “hidden elements” involved in the 11 September incident had been raised, Iran had come under pressure and threat by the United States’ Government. Instead of assigning a fact-finding team, they had killed the main perpetrator and thrown his body into the sea. It would have been reasonable, he stressed, to bring that perpetrator to trial. Meanwhile, the United States viewed Zionism as a sacred notion and ideology, condemning any question about it as an “unforgivable sin”, while endorsing and allowing sacrilege and insult against the beliefs of other religions.
Real freedom, justice, dignity, well-being and lasting security were the rights of all nations, he continued. However, those values could be achieved neither by reliance on the current inefficient system of world governance, nor through the invasion of the world by arrogant powers and the gun barrels of North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) forces. Instead, they must be realized through independence and recognition of others’ rights, and through harmony and cooperation. All those who had tried to introduce reforms while preserving the existing norms and tendencies had failed. The valuable efforts of the non-aligned movement and its Group of 15, and the Group of 77 developing countries and China had failed to bring about fundamental changes. Efforts, therefore, must be made with a firm resolve and through collective cooperation to map out a new plan.
There was no other way than the shared and collective management of the world, he said. Member States should not allow the United Nations, which was a reflection of the collective will and shared inspiration of the community of nations, to deviate from its main course and “play into the hands of world Powers”. That Organization had been created to make possible the effective participation of all nations in international decision-making process. However, the current composition of the Security Council was unjust and inequitable. Changes, including the restructuring of the United Nations, were the basic demands of nations, and must be addressed by the General Assembly. He reiterated a proposal, made during the last session, to designate the current decade as a “decade of shared and collective global management”.
The world was witnessing, in Islamic lands, in Asia, Europe and the Americas, movements that were expanding the pursuit of the realization of justice, freedom, and the creation of a better tomorrow. “Today, nations have been awakened,” he concluded, asking States to salute the bright future that awaited humankind.

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