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South Asian leaders urge
Iraq peace
New Delhi - South
Asian leaders on Tuesday called for a peaceful resolution to the Iraq
crisis, urging restraint on the United States. They were responding to
Monday's report by UN weapons inspector Hans Blix that said Iraq was
defying international demands to disarm.
" The super power should
exercise super restraint " Atal Behari Vajpayee
The report sparked fresh threats from
the US and Britain that war was likely unless Iraq disarmed fully.
The Pakistani, Indian and Sri Lankan
leaderships all said that war was not the solution to the crisis.
Indian Prime Minister Atal Behari
Vajpayee urged Washington to ease off.
"The super power should exercise
super restraint," he said.
"Certain countries in Europe,
too, do not want war. Iraq also does not want war."
Mr Vajpayee feared a conflict would
harm the world economy, sending oil prices soaring - a particular
concern for India, which imports 70% of its oil.
Pakistan is currently a member of the
UN Security Council.
Its Prime Minister, Mir Zafarullah
Khan Jamali, said war should only ever be a last resort.
Mr Jamali is touring five Gulf states
this week to discuss ways of avoiding a conflict.
"In the 21st century, you don't
go for wars. War is the last resort. Diplomacy is the first," he
said.
A far stronger line was taken by
Pakistan's Islamist politicians, who said the UN report had quashed
any legal or moral grounds for a war against Iraq.
The Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal alliance
of religious parties urged the United Nations to prevent military
action threatened by the US.
The alliance said Mr Blix's report
contained no proof that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction.
An alliance leader, Maulana Fazlur
Rehman, said: "The US cannot now continue with aggressive
postures.
"The US had no justification in
the first place to threaten Iraq. After the inspectors' report it
should stop beating the war drums."
Sri Lanka urged Iraq to co-operate
with UN weapons inspections and called for diplomatic efforts to
peacefully resolve the crisis given the "human, political and
economic consequences" of war.
Sri Lanka depends on Gulf oil for
most of its energy requirements and fears a war would seriously damage
its economic recovery.
The state-run Ceylon Petroleum
Corporation put off a planned shutdown of the country's only oil
refinery for maintenance this month because of the uncertainty.
Mr Blix's report on Monday was his
first major account to the UN following 60 days of inspections.
He said Iraq was defying
international demands to disarm but also that there was no proof Iraq
had weapons of mass destruction.
Mohamed ElBaradei, the chief nuclear
inspector, called for several more months to finish work in Iraq and
diplomats indicated the inspectors could deliver a new report on 14
February.
-- BBC News
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