Date: Aug 14, 2012
Source: The Daily Star
Islamic body to suspend Syria during emergency summit

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia: Syria will be suspended Wednesday from the Organization of Islamic Cooperation for its violent suppression of a 17-month uprising against President Bashar Assad, a diplomat said Monday ahead of an emergency OIC summit in Mecca.
 
“The resolution regarding the suspension of the Syrian membership in the OIC is not facing obstacles ... It will be approved,” said the diplomat, speaking on the sidelines of a preliminary foreign ministers meeting in Jeddah.
 
He said the decision was likely to be formally announced at the end of the second day of the summit, which was called by Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah earlier this month.
 
Iran, which has backed the government of President Bashar Assad in his response to the uprising, and has accused the OIC summit hosts Saudi Arabia of assisting the rebels, said it opposed the resolution.
 
“By suspending membership, this does not mean that you are moving toward resolving an issue. This means that you are erasing the issue. We want to really resolve the issue,” Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi said to reporters in Jeddah.
 
His comments pointed to a diplomatic showdown in Mecca among some Sunni Muslim states, including Saudi Arabia, and Shiite Muslim Iran – a reflection of heightened sectarian tensions across the region.
 
The OIC, a body comprising 56 member states plus the Palestinian Authority, aims to represent Muslim interests on the world stage.
 
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad arrived in Saudi Arabia and echoed King Abdullah’s call for the summit to increase Muslim unity, saying before his departure that it was a chance for his country’s viewpoint to be “explained transparently.”
 
“The world today is in a very sensitive situation,” Ahmadinejad told reporters just before leaving Tehran, according to the Fars news agency.
 
“Different groups are at work and the enemies are actively pursuing their aims and a great deal of energy is being spent by Islamic governments and groups on arguing and confronting each other,” he said.
 
“I hope that the summit will focus on increasing unity and lowering antagonism,” he said.
 
But Iran has also pushed for the summit to address the continued uprising in Bahrain, where some Saudi troops went last year at the invitation of the Sunni monarchy to help quell mass protests by the tiny island state’s Shiite majority. Ahmadinejad visited the holy city of Medina, SPA state news agency said, adding that he visited the mosque and tomb of the Prophet Mohammad.
 
King Abdullah’s decision to invite Ahmadinejad to the Mecca summit drew rare criticism in Saudi-owned media Monday, with an editorial in the kingdom’s edition of pan-Arab daily Al-Hayat saying it would “add only schism and division to the summit.”
 
Saudi Arabia has called for the Syrian people to be “enabled to protect themselves” if the world powers cannot protect them.
 
Riyadh is worried that the crisis will further inflame the sectarian violence in Bahrain as well as other countries with large Shiite communities.
 
Late Sunday, Iranian minister Salehi said the resignation of Kofi Annan as the joint U.N. and Arab League envoy to Syria last week did not spell the end of Annan’s six-point plan to end the crisis.
 
Salehi said Iran was opposed to the imposition of an internationally enforced no-fly zone over Syria, which Syrian rebels have called for to curb the ability of Assad’s air power to restrict rebel movements.
 
“Kofi Annan’s plan in Syria is just as alive, and I’m not sure who will come after him, but I imagine he will work along the same suggested guidelines, the six points,” he said in Arabic. “We are against any foreign interference of any kind in Syria, including a no fly zone.”