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REPUBLIC OF IRAQ
STATEMENT BY AHMAD CHALABI,
HEAD OF THE IRAQI DELEGATION,
TO THE 58TH UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY
2 OCTOBER, 2003
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In the name of God, the merciful and benevolent.
Mr. President, Your Excellencies, Ladies and Gentlemen:
I stand in front of you today representing the voice
of the Iraqi citizen who has long suffered from cruelty within and
outside his homeland. Those within his country have inflicted on
him the worst kinds of torture: they have attacked his honour, betrayed
his family, humiliated him, enchained him and thrown him into miserable
wars. His brothers and friends in the region not only maintained
silence, ignorance and blindness toward his catastrophe, they also
criticised him and shamed him the day he dared raise his voice.
And throughout the world, those that stood to benefit scrambled
to trade and work with his torturer.
Very few spoke the truth and embraced it. Very few
turned to the catastrophe of this fellow human being and declared
that he was a victim. To our calls we heard nothing. So the Iraqi
remained lost and persecuted twice over, first from the injustice
of the sword with which the dictatorial regime attacked him at home,
and then from the injustice of the criticism, a more painful affliction,
from those outside. But the Iraqi did not give up, rather he was
persistent and patient and he continued his struggle with his thoughts,
words and actions to achieve liberation, the. foremost ideal that
he has always yearned for.
I stand today before you expressing to you as much
as possible the voice of this Iraqi individual, declaring with him
and for him the end of silence. I ask you all to listen to him,
one by one.
I come today to present you with four essential truths
and to demonstrate through these truths two fundamental rights.
The first truth that I begin with is that Iraq's
long dark night has been ended. The bitter experience of humiliation,
pain and suffering that Iraqis have endured for more than three
decades has ended. It ended with Saddam Hussein fleeing, along with
his cronies and with the collapse of the symbols that they had erected
in Baghdad and throughout Iraq.
As for the second truth, it is that the liberation
of Iraq, and what happened is indeed liberation, could not have
been achieved without the determination of President George W. Bush
and the commitment of the Coalition. At the forefront are the United
States of America and Great Britain. If today we hear the voices
of those in doubt of the intentions of the American and British
governments in undertaking this liberation, we invite them to go
and visit the mass graves, to visit the dried up marshes, to visit
the gassed city of Halabja, to examine the list of the missing whose
very right to live was taken away from them by the regime.
The third truth is that the liberation came as an
embodiment of a universal national Iraqi will. It came as a result
of the vigorous efforts undertaken by the Iraqi opposition to Saddam
Hussein's regime during many long years, when hundreds of thousands
of martyrs were sacrificed. The martyr Ayatollah Muhammad Bakr alHakim
and his companions were not the last to be sacrificed, may God's
mercy be upon them. They added another page to the register of Iraqi
bravery on August 29th, the day of the Iraqi martyr. Nor was the
martyr Akila al-Hashemi, who would have been in this chamber today,
spared from death.
There is no doubt for us to confirm that removing
Saddam's regime is the culmination of a national Iraqi will that
insisted on removing the nightmare from the chest of the nation.
And from here stems the fourth truth, that the fall of the regime
is only a beginning for the birth of a new Iraq. This birth that
so many faithful Iraqis have prepared for, both in Iraq and abroad,
is now ready.
Today, in Iraq we are facing a unique experience.
What will prove our success is the will for good, for development
and for freedom to spread and flourish. I stand here today to confirm
that we in Iraq will not accept anything but success. Iraqis are
capable of success and want success. We will not allow a gang limited
to mercenaries and terrorists to deprive a person, a society and
a nation from a bright tomorrow.
The land of the two rivers, the cradle of civilisation
in Sumer, Akkad, Babylon and Assyria, the land of peace, the land
of the Caliphate and the house of wisdom, the home of Hammurabi's
code and the depository of continuous knowledge, literature, poetry
and intellectual achievement depends first and foremost on its human
resources before its natural and oil resources. Based on this human
wealth, Iraq can achieve a renaissance transporting it from the
grips of totalitarianism and fear to stability, prosperity and forgiveness.
What the international community puts into Iraq will be returned
in multiples. Put your confidence in Iraq, take from it stability
and prosperity and you will see it spread to the region and the
entire world.
The Iraq that we want is the Iraq of the brilliant
individual. More than sixty percent of Iraq's population is below
the age of 20. Our first priority in preparing them for the 21st
century is to give them cultural and educational values that will
allow each one of them to bring out his dignity and self-respect.
In the previous period, in Iraq as in other nations
that suffered from the worst ideologies of the twentieth century,
the individual was suppressed by the masses, the masses by the revolution,
the revolution by the party, and the party by the leader. The result
is that the human being is subsumed under continuous layers of oppression
that obliterate his individualities, making him an object for consumption
in defense of the nation and the economy in the name of the revolution
or to be sacrificed for the leader. Today we confirm that the concerns
of Iraqis are no different from those of all others in the world.
Tomorrow's Iraq must embark by acknowledging the individual citizen
as the basis of sovereignty and the starting point for legislation.
The rights of the individual person are basic rights, and the rights
of the group only derive from this.
Iraqis like others insist on their rights for Dignity,
Freedom, Justice and Peace. Asserting these rights is the foundation
for tomorrow's Iraq. The dignity of a human being in Iraq will be
protected without exception, without consideration for social status,
political position and economic situation. We will not give away
the dignity of an accused even if convicted guilty. We begin with
dignity because the previous regime worked to convince the Iraqi
that his dignity is an endowment from the ruler. We confirm today
that the dignity of the nation stems from the dignity of each citizen
in it.
As with dignity, so too freedom. Freedom is not a
gift from the ruler and the state. It is a principle, a basis and
the essence of a human being. Responsible freedom that does not
impinge upon the freedom of others is the core of the social contract.
Despite the excesses that outsiders and infiltrators have inflicted,
with the fall of the repressive regime, Iraqis have proven to themselves
that freedom is not chaos.
As is the individual's instinct for freedom, so is
his demand for justice. Justice will be a basic tenet that ensures
the neutrality and independences of the judiciary. The previous
regime took away justice, making the apparatuses of the state means
of repression and control.
Last but not least, and after wretched wars that
took people's lives and destroyed nations and created catastrophes
in their wake, the new Iraq will abide with a new defensive policy
whose pillar is peace. Iraq will be an activist for peace for the
region and the world.
We have mentioned as the first of these fundamental
principles, Dignity, Freedom, Justice and Peace because they represent
the basis for a political future. The new Iraq will certainly uphold
all human rights, starting with the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, including of course the right of man to life, property and
the pursuit of happiness.
We take responsibility that Iraq in its legislation
and laws will be equally just to its entire people. No person is
above the law; indeed there will be no distinction on the basis
of religion, sect, race, language, ethnicity, gender, class or tribe.
The previous regime has dug deep into these divisions. As for the
new Iraq, it will rely on justice and fairness.
The Iraqi woman is capable of achievement, excellence
and generosity of spirit. She can take on all responsibilities in
the nation. It is the duty of the society and the state to remove
additional burdens blocking her way.
The constant dialogue required between the Iraqi
citizen and the state that represents him and serves him will be
on the basis of an honest, democratic and representational system.
This system stands on the principle of separation of powers and
upholds elections as the as the ultimate arbiter. We are not concerned
simply with democratic appearances, but more so the safety of the
political system as the embodiment of the democratic spirit. The
pillars of this system are first, a separation of powers, by writing
a constitutional framework that ensures non-interference between
the judicial, legislative, executive powers. This forms a sound
basis for each to oversee the other. Second, ensuring accountability,
starting with the above mentioned supervision and going through
elections that form the main entry of the individual in participation
in politics and finally arriving at empowering civil society through
the free press, unions and independent institutions. These will
take the role of monitor, critic and pursuer of political power
in its many faces. The third pillar is to uphold transparency as
a fundamental principle stemming from the fact that the source of
sovereignty is the citizen. The state is there to serve him and
it is answerable to him. It is his right to inquire about its affairs
and it is not within the right of the state to withhold such information.
Fourth is to respect the rights of the minority in relation to the
majority. Here it is important to distinguish between a political
majority and minority and a factional majority and minority. Political
majorities and minorities are those that are exposed through the
ballot box, not through population census and not through a random
correlation between them. It is not in anyone's authority to demand
a political right on the basis of a presumed factional majority.
We do not want a political, sectarian or national allocation in
Iraq. A representative, federal political system can best express
the interests of all Iraqi citizens regardless of their religion,
creed, ethnicity or language.
If the previous period was characterised by limiting
all powers to an abusive few in Baghdad then tomorrow's Iraq will
stand on the principle of local authority in the context of a federal
union. Federalism in the way that Iraqis understand it now is not
dividing the homeland; rather it is a means of empowerment and rehabilitation
of those living in different regions to take responsibility of their
affairs in their regions without constant interference from the
central government. We rely on the federal system, like the democratic
system, because of our clear understanding of the relationship between
a state and its citizens. This relationship is not one of guardianship
because the Iraqi citizen is not a minor and is therefore not in
need of the state's interference in all his affairs. Our concern
is that this relationship be one of care where the state is the
vigilant servant of the safety of the citizen, and a relationship
of nurture in some areas, especially for the youth in providing
social, education and health services.
Complementing our belief in federalism, and in contrast
to the nationalist excesses of the previous regime, we declare to
you all that Iraq is one nation, permanent and whole. There is nothing
in this declaration that reduces the continuity of Iraqis with Arabs
and Muslims. This does not contradict the sentiment that many Iraqis
inside have about their own culture and identity. It confirms rather,
that Iraq in all its territory, from its mountains in the far north
to its marshes and gulf in the extreme south, passing through its
rivers, meadows and deserts is a lasting unit unable to divide.
When we declare this, we not only express the opinion of most Iraqis,
we consider it a principal belief.
We seek to strengthen the rule of law and institutions
of governance. That is, that authority extending from the citizen
is emanated not usurped through a political office. This position
is upheld because of a legal basis, not because of the whims and
opinions of the person holding the position. The previous regime
issued many arbitrary rules and regulations based on the disposition
of one man. The alternative in tomorrow's Iraq is the application
of the rule of law through sanctioned legislative authority that
embodies the will of the Iraqi people through an independent judicial
authority and under supervision of an independent legal body.
Last but not least, we will address the relationship
between religion and state in the new Iraq. Islam is the religion
of the majority in Iraq; it etches out the Iraqi identity as well
as the state and the nature of governance.
In any case, the great civilisational heritage and
valuable cultural depository of Islamic jurisprudence is no doubt
one of the assets of Iraq. We will benefit from it through a judiciary
that is based on equality and pluralism. It is important for us
to point out to a truth often overlooked. That the state in the
previous century has used religion and taken out of it what suited
the wishes of those usurping power. It negated the independence
of institutions and religious centers, taking over the awgaf and
imposing a religious terminology suitable to its interests at the
expense of others. Religion in Iraq is one of the most important
assets of the individual and of society, and we will not abandon
it, neither in its juridical, intellectual or daily implications.
These are the main points of what we want for our
country. Our right today from the world is to demand help and assistance,
thanking all those that stood by Iraqis at their worst hour and
forgiving those that did not stand with us.
It is important for all the nations of the world
to acknowledge that what happened in Iraq yesterday in terms of
horrors, and what is happening today in terms of reconstruction,
presents a dramatic historic event. The international community
must stand with Iraq in this.
This is what we want of ourselves and what we want
from you on the road to a free, just and peaceful Iraq.
We want an Iraq to recognise that unity and plurality
are two faces of the same truth.
We want an Iraq that returns sovereignty to the individual,
citizen, human being, not to the leader.
We want an Iraq imbedded in its cultural and religious
identity, but in dialogue, without compunction with the global heritage.
We want an Iraq in continuity with its past, but
looking forward towards the future.
We want an Iraq that lives in peace with itself,
its neighbours and the world.
May peace be upon you.
Mr. President:
I stand before this Assembly as a representative
of free Iraq. To all those here who helped us in our struggle for
liberation we extend our gratitude. Our liberation would not have
been achieved without the determination of President, George W.
Bush and the commitment of the Coalition, at the forefront of which
stand the people of the United States of America and Great Britain.
The Iraqis will never forget your courage and sacrifice on our behalf.
To those who stood with the dictator and who continue
to question the intentions of the American and British governments
in undertaking this liberation, we invite you to come and visit
the mass graves where half a million of our citizens lie, come and
visit the dried up marshes, come and visit Halabja where chemicals
were dropped on civilians, come and examine the lists of the disappeared
whose right to live was taken away from them by Saddam Hussein.
And we the Iraqi people will ask you why you chose to remain silent.
We are here today to declare that a new Iraq is born.
An Iraq where dignity, justice and human rights are assured for
all citizens. An Iraq at peace with its people, its neighbours and
the world. An Iraq that stands ready to regain its rightful place
in the international community of free and proud nations.
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