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Islamabad
hits back as CW defends suspension
By Our Diplomatic Correspondent
KAMPALA—The Commonwealth defended its decision to suspend Pakistan on
Friday as leaders from 53-nation grouping opened a summit in Uganda and
shifted the focus to climate change and other issues.
Islamabad reacted angrily to Thursday’s suspension, describing the
decision as “unreasonable and unjustified” and threatened to pull out
from the loose federation of mostly former British colonies.
“In these circumstances, you can be assured that every country that has
been suspended will say that we didn’t understand the unique
circumstances that prevailed in their country at the time,” Commonwealth
Secretary General Don McKinnon said. “We think we did.”
An ultimatum set by the Commonwealth this month for Pakistani President
Pervez Musharraf to step down as army chief, free judges and opposition
supporters, and lift media curbs expired on Thursday.
McKinnon said there had been differences within the nine-country
ministerial committee that decided to suspend Pakistan, notably
objections from Sri Lanka, but stressed the move was the result of
consensus.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse expressed “strong objections” to
the move, his office in Colombo said, while diplomatic sources said that
Malaysia was also opposed.
Other leaders including British Prime Minister Gordon Brown praised the
move. Human Rights Watch hoped the Commonwealth would follow it up by
taking on a more active role in international diplomacy, spokesman Reed
Brandy told.
Musharraf’s bloodless coup in 1999 had already earned Pakistan a
Commonwealth suspension. It was brought back in the fold in 2004 when
the general promised to hang up his uniform, a promise he failed to
keep.
The last countries to be suspended were Fiji last year and Zimbabwe in
2002. Gathered in a retreat just outside Kampala, presidents and prime
ministers from most of the Commonwealth’s 53 members meanwhile began
discussing efforts to combat climate change. Officials emphasised the
urgency of the issue and the need to step up cooperation between member
states. Maltese Prime Minister Lawrence Gonzi, the group’s chairman,
said that greenhouse gas emissions must be cut by at least 50 percent
below 1990 levels by 2050. It was unclear however if all members would
sign up to Gonzi’s proposal in the summit’s final declaration to be
released Sunday. “There are still differences,” McKinnon told a press
conference. The loose federation of mostly former British colonies
includes some major polluters: but also some of those countries most at
risk from the consequences of global warming.
Among the major polluting countries at the gathering are Britain, Canada
— and Australia, the latter one of few rich nations not to have ratified
the Kyoto Protocol on reducing greenhouse gases.
But Commonwealth members in front line of climate change’s effects
include the Maldives and Kiribati, a Pacific island group in acute
danger of being washed away by rising sea levels. Gonzi said the
Commonwealth should send a “strong message of support” to next month’s
UN Framework Convention on Climate Change conference in Bali, a crucial
meeting that will see countries discuss a successor to Kyoto.
Britain’s Prince Charles, attending his first overseas Commonwealth
heads of government summit along with his mother Queen Elizabeth II,
ensured the problem was centre stage.
“We all of course hold this planet in trust for our children and
grandchildren... We are all putting such pressure on (the planet) that
climate change has become the greatest challenge facing mankind,” the
59-year old said.
The opening of the summit was marred as a rally by Uganda’s main
opposition party to protest against what they say are human rights
abuses turned violent. A civilian and a police officer sustained serious
injuries.
Pakistan on Friday appreciated the decision of the Government of Sri
Lanka to disassociate itselffrom the Commonwealth Ministerial Action
Group (CMAG)’s decision to suspend Pakistan from the Councils of the
Commonwealth. |