BAGHDAD,
January 20 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Pledging Monday,
January 20, to boost its cooperation with U.N. disarmament inspectors,
Iraq signed an accord with them before they deliver a key report to
the Security Council next week, while accusing the inspectors of
illegal provocations instigated by Washington.
However,
the announcement of the deal by U.N. Monitoring, Verification and
Inspection Committee (UNMOVIC) chief Hans Blix was tempered as he said
they were yet to discuss several “substantive issues” related to
anthrax, Scud missiles and the lethal VX nerve gas.
Blix
said after meeting with Iraqi foreign ministry officials the 10-point
accord covers access to all sites, including private homes, encourages
Iraqi scientists to accept private interviews and appoints a team to
search for warheads.
“We
have gone a long way on that but there have been hitches on it and
some of these hitches were solved today,” Blix told reporters.
Talks
since Sunday, January 19, between Iraqi officials and Blix and Mohamed
ElBaradei, head of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA),
focused on “stocktaking of inspections” and issues raised by them,
said Iraqi presidential advisor Amer Al-Saadi, who is in charge of
Iraq’s disarmament dossier.
“Access
has been obtained to all sites. This will continue. The Iraqi side
will encourage persons to accept access also to private sites,”
Saadi said after a 24-hour mission by the chief U.N. inspectors.
A
list of scientists already submitted would be “supplemented in
accordance with advice from the inspectors,” under the accord.
However
Blix warned that major issues remained outstanding with Iraq. “There
are outstanding issues which we were not able to solve, substantive
issues related to anthrax, VX (nerve gas), Scud missiles. We did not
discuss that yet.”
Provocative
Behavior By Inspectors
Baghdad,
meanwhile, accused the inspectors of working for the United States,
not the United Nations.
“The
inspectors began their work in an acceptable manner but were not long
in stepping outside their mission and collecting information for
intelligence work,” the ruling Baath Party newspaper charged.
“They
began to make lists of scientists and ask them questions with hidden
aims, to take an interest in army camps and non-prohibited military
production,” Ath-Thawra reported.
The
inspectors were “collecting information about the scientific and
technical capacity of Iraq for reasons which are not linked to the
search for weapons of mass destruction.”
The
daily said the inspectors’ conduct had become “more vulgar with
time, including site visits during days off and searches of suitcases
and diaries of certain people in a humiliating way and an invasion of
their privacy.”
It
described questioning of scientists “like police interrogations
trying to trap them and report things they did not say.”
Ath-Thawra
said such behavior was the result of “direct and insolent
interference” by the United States in the inspection process.
The
Bush administration had “pushed the inspectors to commit these
violations to provoke Iraq and bring tension to its relations with the
Security Council.
“What
the inspectors have done in recent days angers every Iraqi because it
is illegal, immoral and provocative,” the daily said.
Inspectors’
Report “New Beginning”: China
Security
Council permanent member China said Monday the January 27 report by
U.N. weapons inspectors on Iraqi disarmament should be seen as a
“new beginning” and not the end of the inspection process.
“Since
the United Nations resumed the inspections in Iraq, the work in this
regard is proceeding well and should be affirmed,” Chinese Foreign
Minister Tang Jiaxuan told reporters ahead of a special meeting of the
U.N. Security Council.
“I
believe this report is not a full stop of the inspection work but
rather a new beginning,” he said. “I think we should respect their
opinions and support their work.”
War
on Iraq Could Divide World: Primakov
In
another development, former Russian prime minister Yevgeny Primakov
warned Monday that a U.S. war against Iraq could divide the
international community on the basis of religion and lead to internal
rifts in many states.
“A
(U.S.) war on Iraq will lead the world towards more divisions. It
risks dividing the world on the basis of religion and
civilizations,” Primakov told the Jeddah Economic Forum in this Red
Sea city of western Saudi Arabia.
“This
is one of the most serious problems facing the world ... It could
divide the world into Muslims and non-Muslims and lead to dividing
countries like Russia where 20 million Muslims live,” he said in a
keynote speech.
“Many
countries could break up from within. This is very serious ... Both
Europe and the United states have large Muslim communities,” said
Primakov, who is president of Russia’s chambers of commerce and
industry.
Primakov
said the world community must work to preserve and protect all
civilizations and religions in an environment of peaceful coexistence.
He
also warned Washington it would not secure the same support it had
obtained in its campaign in Afghanistan.
“Such
support will diminish if the United States attacked Iraq. This will
also weaken the (U.S.-led) war on terrorism,” which began after the
September 11, 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, he said.
Countries
neighboring Iraq are opposed to any strikes on Baghdad because they
are “unwilling to see revolutionary changes and risk their
stability,” Primakov said.