


|  | TIM SEBASTIAN Now, let me take some questions from the floor. There's a lady in the third row. HESHAM YOUSSEF Tim, there is something that I have to respond to. Mr. Chibli said that the Arab League is corrupt. I don't think that accusations of that kind should be levelled without proof, and I think this is a very serious accusation. TIM SEBASTIAN Do you want to answer that? HESHAM YOUSSEF Listen, we can talk about political problems ... TIM SEBASTIAN Let him answer the specific point that you raised. CHIBLI MALLAT I think it's extraordinary that someone who is being accused of genocide in his own country stands and uses the system which is called the Arab League to put himself forward as a gatherer of Arabs. I think this is the ultimate corruption. The corruption is for someone like Mr. Mubarak who is third in line after two other Pharaohs in staying in power for so long, to remain in power for so long. HESHAM YOUSSEF Are we here to attack leaders and presidents? Is this why we're here? TIM SEBASTIAN Well, you're here to discuss. HESHAM YOUSSEF Yes, we're here to discuss. TIM SEBASTIAN You're free to make the points you want and he's free to make the points he wants. AZMI BISHARA It's an internal question, leaders should be changed not in inter-states organisations but in their own country, that's not the place, the Arab League is not the place. TIM SEBASTIAN All right, Dr. Ghabra, very briefly. There are a lot of questions in the audience and I want to go for them. SHAFEEQ GHABRA Very briefly. The Arab League, on two issues, one of the problems of the Arab League, that it is based on membership that you only speak Arabic and you have to be an independent Arab country. This was the colonial era that put us together in the Arab League. The reality is; membership should be based on style of governments, what you do inside your country, economic development, basic ingredients that relate to ... TIM SEBASTIAN All right. There are a lot of questions there, and we'll have an opportunity to debate these issues in detail. We raised the issue of corruption because you wanted to address it. Please, gentlemen. Lady in the third row, please let us have your question. AUDIENCE Q (F) This is directed at the speakers for the motion. I'm going to start with the classic saying, 'When life gives you lemon, make lemonade, ' so we should consider the Arabic countries as lemons and the Arab League as lemonade, so why do we fall down? To learn to pick ourselves up, so why do we have to abandon something that we've been working so long and hard for? We have the potential as Arab countries and we should prove the public are wrong. What do you think about that? TIM SEBASTIAN Chibli Mallat. CHIBLI MALLAT Well, I agree with you. The problem is the vehicle. I think that when I say it's counter-productive, there are so many talents in the Arab world and we're being let down all the time by this Arab League. We've tried time and again to reform it. I have been myself to the Arab League on one occasion, in Cairo, where we were supposed to debate reform, and that was the time when Saad Eddin Ibrahim was in prison, so it gives you an idea of the extraordinary gap that there is between the lemons and the lemonade, and to the extent that the lemonade does not correspond at all to what we deserve, I think it's better to avoid it and try to find out something else. AUDIENCE Q (F) What do we do then? CHIBLI MALLAT Look, I'll give you a very simple example. We're living in Qatar today and Tim has asked about a better vehicle. I think we need to be much more modest until there is a change in the overall Arab system that allows us to get something else. The example is very simple and Hesham mentioned the issue of the image of the Arab abroad. Today in Qatar there is an extraordinary meeting of Arab scientists, all these people we have lost to the West. They are mostly in the West, giving all the talents that they have, their brains, to the West. There is a small foundation here, compared to the Arab League, called The Qatar Foundation, that for the first time in history brings them together. The Arab League has been ... AZMI BISHARA Small country with a big foundation. CHIBLI MALLAT ... 51 years and they weren't able to bring us anything even remote to that very small symbolic dimension ... TIM SEBASTIAN All right, let me bring Hesham Youssef in here. HESHAM YOUSSEF Now, to argue that countries are not reforming or they are not changing because of the presence of the Arab League is ludicrous. You know, why isn't any country changing its educational system or its health-care system or its transportation system, or advancing its process of democratisation? Is it because the Arab League in Cairo is preventing it from doing so, so the Arab League is preventing the countries that are eager for reform but the Arab League is preventing them from doing so? I think this is unbelievable. You can't make an argument of that nature and get away with it. You know, reform is important, and we have to advance in reform, whether it's political, economic or social, you name it, but you can't blame the Arab League for governments not reforming, and in relation to the difficulties that we have, we have all kinds of difficulties. If we can't resolve the issue of Iraq, you can't say the Arab League is the problem because we can't solve the issue of Iraq; we can't solve the issue of Palestine so the Arab League is the problem; you can't resolve the issue of Darfur so the Arab League is the problem. If there is a problem of political will in dealing with many of these issues, not only in the Arab world but also at the international level, then you have to find out what the problem is and how to resolve it. TIM SEBASTIAN Let him come back on that. CHIBLI MALLAT I think that there is a profound difference in my view with yours and Azmi's, and I'll give you two simple examples. You say the Arab League is a symptom. It's not only a symptom, it is part and parcel of a system that is standing in front of reform; I'll give you two examples. TIM SEBASTIAN No, please, very, very briefly. There are a lot of people waiting. CHIBLI MALLAT Saying they are part of the problem, the Arab League is part of the problem. The reason today that we have sent a motion, 71 M.P.'s out of 188 Lebanese M.P.'s sent a motion to the Arab League at the last summit to say, 'Our current president is illegitimate.' What has the Arab League done with it? Zero. It has embraced an illegitimate president. TIM SEBASTIAN All right, let's move on to the gentleman in the second row. Your question please sir, we'll get a microphone to you. AUDIENCE Q (M) Thank you. I think that Arab League is representing police states. The Arab League was keeping silence about the chemicals that Saddam was using against the Kurds, the crimes that was used in the south, the inhuman practices in Darfur. Why was the Arab League keeping people like us blind? Why has the Arab League never spoken about dictatorship used against the Arab persons and Arab man like me? TIM SEBASTIAN So you want to see it disbanded. AUDIENCE Q (M) Yes. I am saying that the Arab League is representing such dictators and that is why it was not promoting human rights and democracy. TIM SEBASTIAN All right, and your question is to this side of the argument? AUDIENCE Q (M) Yes. My question is, why all the lies about the Arab League, why the lies in the media about democracy, about human rights, while the practices are different, where, you know, the Arabs for so many years, we are treated very badly in the states. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, Hesham Youssef would you like to answer that? HESHAM YOUSSEF Thank you very much. You see, I think the issue of democracy and the issue of human rights is very important, but what you are arguing is that the Arab countries were silent and in many cases we made mistakes, and we have to admit that we made mistakes, absolutely we made mistakes, but then this is the nature of things. Many countries in the world are blaming ... TIM SEBASTIAN He was talking about lies, not just mistakes. HESHAM YOUSSEF What lies? Did we say that nothing happened to the Kurds? Did we say that nothing happened in Darfur? You mentioned a report that has come up from the Arab League that was critical of the situation in Darfur and the practices in Darfur. TIM SEBASTIAN Yes, it did get buried though, didn't it, and never referred to again once it had come out. HESHAM YOUSSEF No, no. It didn't get buried and it was used, and as a matter of fact this was the first report that came out of a regional or an international organisation of that nature. TIM SEBASTIAN Do you want to come back on that, what he said? AUDIENCE Q (M) Yes. I am saying that they are not being truthful because how do you expect people in the streets to have some respect, to believe in the Arab League, that it is representing people like me, millions of people are in this region. What they are saying is completely different than what they're practising. We don't believe in the Arab League, this is the problem there. TIM SEBASTIAN Azmi Bishara, do you want to come in on this? AZMI BISHARA But I don't think, I mean, the Arab League is being treated as if it's a political regime. It is not, it's a political organisation, official organisation of states and I think there are things that it's more complaining actually than a motion, specific motion for specific target which is disbanding the Arab League. Of course we all complain from the lack of democracy in the Arab world, in any states. There is not one Arab democratic state in the Arab world. How do you want the Arab League to look like? The question of the Arab man in the Arab state, the Arab citizen does not elect the Arab League, exactly like the world citizen does not elect the UN, and I think if you go even to Europe, you will find it very hard to mobilise British people or French to go to vote for the EC, for the European Commission, because you don't have the direct contact, they are not ruling. You usually blame and criticise, and I believe democratic forces should do more than complaining and criticising anything Arab, adopting or even internalising racist ideas about ourselves. Do something about Arab regimes in the Arab countries, not blame Arab culture and Arab League and Arab language and Arab identity, this is not a problem. I think we are internalising racism. TIM SEBASTIAN All right, we'll take a question from the gentleman at the back, you sir. AUDIENCE Q (M) Thank you very much. For the gentlemen that are against the motion, I have a question. If the current failures do not qualify as enough reasons for the Arab League to disband, what would qualify them? AZMI BISHARA Arab unity in one state; you won't need the Arab League any more if you unify Arab countries. TIM SEBASTIAN He's not asking you that. He's asking you if you don't think it should be disbanded now, what would make you want to disband it? AZMI BISHARA Arab countries become democratic. I believe that you will have something like the European Union, voluntary Arab unity of Arab countries. In that case you won't need this kind of organisation, but this is the slightest common denominator that we have in the region that reflects the fact that this is an Arab region. There is a debate in this part of the world whether there is Arab world, Arab region, Arab nationality or not, and actually what are we doing? We are helping this debate. They are advising Arabs, they are advising Arabs means they won't be something else. They will be sects, tribes fighting each other, that's what's happening in Iraq. Ask me, somebody who thinks that Arab identity is important as a minority inside Israel, I will tell you Israel would like to turn us into religions and tribes and clans, and I'm fighting for keeping the Arab identity and I hear people outside speaking about the no need for Arab identity. I think this is an issue of keeping the slightest, weakest common denominator that we are allowed to keep after the colonial era. If we're allowed to have one state, that's great with me, one state of voluntarily united, democratic Arab state, that would be nice. AUDIENCE Q (M) Thank you very much. TIM SEBASTIAN Thank you very much. Gentleman in the front row. Remember questions also for this side of the argument as well. We'll get a microphone to you. AUDIENCE Q (M) My question is to Shafeeq. You said that there is a problem in the Arab League, and you just you want to disband it. Why didn't you bring anything to replace that, and you know that disbanding a bad organisation and not replacing it will cause a bigger problem. Don't you believe that bad leadership is better than nothing? TIM SEBASTIAN Shafeeq Ghabra. SHAFEEQ GHABRA Well, you see, reforming the Arab League is problematic. In 2004 there was this talk about reforming the Arab League and having a common market and the vote will be different. Nothing happened; six years in fact, nothing happened in the reform of the Arab League, in fact reforming the regime of Hilasilasi of Ethiopia during the times of Hilasilasi. It will not get us anywhere. It is not doing anything in the tribal sectarian war in Iraq. It is not doing anything in what is going on in Palestine, it is not doing anything anywhere, and therefore disbanding it means to me like exactly disbanding a Ministry of Information somewhere in Qatar or in the Arab world. Distribute the organisations that are linked to the Arab League, to the variety of Arab states, let those states, and some of them take responsibility. TIM SEBASTIAN Qatar has disbanded its Ministry of Information. SHAFEEQ GHABRA Yes, disbanded its Ministry of Information. You can do the same to the Arab League and still, I mean, you have 12 organisations under the Arab League. None of them is doing anything serious. They are all under budget. They don't even have the salaries to pay at the end of the month. None of the Arab states are paying for them. Find a way, there is an organisation for women, what does it do for women? There is an organisation for trade, what does it do for trade? TIM SEBASTIAN Let him come back on that point. Hesham Youssef. HESHAM YOUSSEF You see, it is very unfortunate; you're speaking about something without knowing the basic information of most of these things that you're talking about. You see, I'm not saying that the Arab League is the best institution in the world, far from it, and I know many of the difficulties facing the Arab League more than you can imagine, but I can tell you a lot of success stories about what has been done by many of these organisations, whether it's an organisation for development of agriculture or industrial development, also advance tourism or trade. I have seen tens of business people who have told me that as a result of the treaty area in the Arab world that they have been able to live, and that their businesses have been flourishing. Many investments, inter-Arab investments, tourism in the Arab world, you know, there are many success stories in relation to some of these issues. Some of them are not known to some of you because of the bad publicity. TIM SEBASTIAN All right, OK, shall we move on? We're going to take a question from a lady at the back please. AUDIENCE Q (F) I have a question for Mr. Chibli. I would like to ask if you are criticising the Arab League because it hasn't done anything in Lebanon, when the people in Lebanon itself have not been able to unite. There are so many sectors in Lebanon itself and they have not been able to unite to come up with one decision, so how do you expect the Arab League as a whole to come and solve this problem. Thank you. CHIBLI MALLAT Look, I think that there is no doubt that the responsibility for each people is their own responsibility first and foremost, in other words the motion tonight with us is not about what to do with the sectarian system in Lebanon, which I agree is a big problem, and I'm not saying that the motion tonight of disbanding the Arab League has to do with the issue of Lebanon. What I know is that every time there is something related to Lebanon, the Arab League goes in the wrong direction, and I'll give, because Lebanon could be an emotional dimension, personal dimension, but let me get back to Azmi on the issue of Iraq. Back in 2003, a group of Arab individuals, citizens, got together and said, 'Look, we're going to have the Americans occupy Iraq, let's do something about it. Let us put pressure so that Mr. Saddam Hussein leaves power.' Do you think it want anywhere with the Arab League? It went nowhere with the Arab League, it was the responsibility of the Arab League to prevent the war in 2003 and there was a movement from 50 individuals in the Arab world, proud Arabs, who said, 'Mr. Hussein is bringing us a catastrophe, he should go home.' TIM SEBASTIAN OK, Azmi Bishara wants to answer that, let him come in. AZMI BISHARA Well, I mean, because Chibli directed it to me, I think it is a kind of, I mean, either the Arab League changes Saddam Hussein and the United States should come in? It's not the job of either. They could not convince Saddam Hussein, OK, bad for Saddam Hussein, but it doesn't mean that the Arab League should be disbanded because it could not convince Saddam Hussein to leave power. I think the UN won't be able to convince George Bush to leave power, I'm sure of that. This doesn't mean that the UN should be disbanded, you know, and I think that George Bush should leave power, yes, as early as possible, and I don't think that the UN can convince him to do that. It's not an argument. I think Saddam Hussein should have gone earlier, yes, this is true, and the Arab League could not succeed, it's true. This means that the Arab League should be in power, not disbanded, it should be in power. You should give the Arab League more strength, not disband the Arab League. HESHAM YOUSSEF Very briefly, one on Lebanon and one on Iraq. One on Lebanon in relation to stability in the Arab world. Stability in Lebanon now is as a result of a deal brokered by the Arab League. This is one thing. The second point is in relation to Iraq. The situation in Iraq, it's not only the Arab world that wanted to avoid war. It's the Arab world, France, Germany, Russia, we all tried to avoid the war. We all failed, so why are you blaming the Arab League wholly for failing that? As for the situation in Iraq now, who is trying to broker a process of accord and reconciliation in Iraq now, after everybody else failed? It's the Arab League, and we've been arguing for a process of reconciliation and accord in Iraq for over a year-and-a-half, and no-one responded, but when an opportunity arrived, they didn't accept meeting anywhere in the world except in the Arab League, all the factions of Iraq. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, let's move to a question. Lady in the third row. AUDIENCE Q (F) My question is for the panel against the motion. Why do you defend the Arab League when every time our leaders gather to solve our problems, they agree to disagree? Don't you think that it's time that we as Arabs start looking towards forming a more effective united Arab Union? TIM SEBASTIAN Azmi Bishara. AZMI BISHARA Well, this is a generalisation, Arabs agree to disagree, Arabs do not leave an opportunity to miss an opportunity. These are the generalisations. TIM SEBASTIAN But she doesn't feel served by the Arab League. AZMI BISHARA OK. I'm not served at all by the Arab League. I don't feel served, I'm not served, the Arab League does not serve me, it does not serve you. Still we can discuss things. I mean, we don't only discuss things that serve us, it doesn't serve me at all; I don't expect anything from the Arab League. I am just suspicious about people who want to disband the Arab League; they want to disband Arabs in general. TIM SEBASTIAN Let her come back. AUDIENCE Q (F) So we see them on TV arguing and not agreeing on anything and sometimes causing scenes, actually embarrassing scenes, so I think that it's time that we start forming a more effective union, other than the Arab League because it's not working. AZMI BISHARA Well, I, you know, OK, some Arabs are embarrassed by the fact that they're Arabs. AUDIENCE Q (F) No. AZMI BISHARA I'm not one of these. And I like seeing Arabs not agreeing on everything, I like seeing Arabs debating things and discussing things. Here for example we do not agree and it's called suddenly debate and democracy. Sometimes disagreement is good, sometimes disagreement is bad. TIM SEBASTIAN The point she's making is, they're being paid to do more than debate in the Arab League, they're paid to come up with some kinds of decision, isn't that right? AUDIENCE Q (F) That's right. AZMI BISHARA Well, the question in that case is whether this organisation is an efficient organisation, is it run by voting etc? I think usually inter-state organisations like this who don't have power to impose their will don't like to vote things, they like to agree on things by consent, what we call consensus, because they cannot empower, you can't have a majority to impose things, to dictate things, they don't have an army like the Security Council sometimes now have. Now, they have to agree on things, that's why they have to debate. The problem is not the fact that you disagree or you debate. The question is the people there, the kind of the regimes, their ideas, their thinking what they want to make an Arab League a tool for themselves to impose their will, yes, this is a problem that needs to be changed. TIM SEBASTIAN Are you happy with that kind of answer? AUDIENCE Q (F) No, because he says that we should empower the people in the Arab League and so how do you suggest we empower them? AZMI BISHARA No, you have to change, you know, we can't be lazy about democracy, expecting the US bringing us to buy ships and changing the Arab League instead of changing our regime. I think there's a kind of laziness of democratic forces in the Arab world who want democracy for them being served sometimes by ships, sometimes by changing the Arab League. Democratic forces have to make democratic actions and therefore not complain about the Arab League. TIM SEBASTIAN All right. Shafeeq Ghabra, you want to make a point here. SHAFEEQ GHABRA You know, I mean, I think it is very important that the Arab League knows, and it's not about the Arab states now, the Arab League knows that we would want to dismantle it, that we are not happy ... AZMI BISHARA So this motion is tactical, OK. SHAFEEQ GHABRA ... and that the Arab League needs to know, because you see, short of that, the Arab world will only move from one defeat to the other, and from one stagnation to the other. AZMI BISHARA Then you understand now, the motion is to strengthen the Arab League. TIM SEBASTIAN Could he just finish and then we're going to move to another question. SHAFEEQ GHABRA The Arab League should know that we want to dismantle it and it had better dismantle itself because it is irrelevant. However, one last point. This is the type of the Arab League that we have. It's always accepts others in defeat. Yes, this is the time, this is exactly, and not only that. TIM SEBASTIAN You have ten more seconds. SHAFEEQ GHABRA The second problem I have, please hear my second problem, is Azmi, I have a problem with your thinking, and I'll tell you why, Azmi. AZMI BISHARA You're not the only one. SHAFEEQ GHABRA You said, I'm quoting you, you feel suspicious with people, you're suspicious with the other point of view and that's another problem for the Arab world and the Arab League as well. TIM SEBASTIAN We're going up to a gentleman at the back, you sir. AUDIENCE Q (M) Good evening. I just want to mention one thing. None of the panellists, they all mentioned there is no one single democratic experience in the Arab world and they just forgot about the transparent democratic process that just took place in Palestine, so that was one democratic experience, so there is democracy there in the Arab world. Second, I have comments to more than one of the panellists. To Mr. Youssef, when you compare with other organisations that did fail in the world, that's fine, but if the Arab League is going to keep comparing itself with who fails, we're not going to ever succeed. Look at the successes that was in the EU or even the Schengen or what's happening in Latin America right now. Those have achieved things that even the Arab League hasn't achieved any of them, like the borders between the countries, the visas between the citizens. People from outside the Arab world can move within the Arab world more freely than Arab citizens, and I think when you go to Cairo, it's a very good experience when you see some Palestinians, they get trapped in the airport. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, your question is? AUDIENCE Q (M) My question is, if they're going to keep talking about whether it's going to dismantle or not, how long is it going to take for these reforms to take place, and if that's not going to happen, then maybe Mr. Ghabra can say, 'OK, dismantle it,' but I ask him if you want to dismantle it, what's the other option? Thank you. TIM SEBASTIAN Hesham Youssef, very briefly. How long, how long? HESHAM YOUSSEF Well, people are tending to blame the tool. You just can't keep blaming the tool that you have. It is as if you are a writer and blaming the computer for a bad novel that you wrote. It's unfair. This is not how things are run. I'm not comparing us with trade organisations. Of course the EU is a huge success. We started in the wrong way. We started by talking about unity, and we haven't achieved unity, but more recently we've been talking about much more practical things and we have achieved the Arab Free Trade Area. We are connecting electricity grids with benefits to millions of people in the Arab world. We are making practical steps that would help in achieving the interests of many Arabs around the world. Visas, I agree with you, it's a huge problem, and we have been pushing for it. Unfortunately governments have been resisting. You can't blame the tool for not achieving some of the things that we all hope we can achieve but are unable to do so. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, Chibli Mallat, the point that the gentleman made was that there has been democracy, and look what happened in the Palestinian territories. CHIBLI MALLAT I think the issue of Palestine is quite specific, particularly because of the brutality of the Israeli neighbourhood, so as you know, it's not even a state. It's true that there has been a lot of heroism in Palestine to establish democracy and has been successful to some extent against very difficult odds but it's certain it's not thanks to the Arab League that we reached that point. However, I'd like to come to that point that Mr. Youssef has been hammering, and I think we see to be reading from very different scripts. You were mentioning all these fantastic achievements of the Arab League which I'm sure our good audience will find very difficult to identify. What I know is that the most efficient dimension of the Arab League, and I would be grateful if you could not attack us, Shafeeq and I, because we've done our homework and we are very pleased to speak objectively about the problem that is very much at heart for us. The most successful enterprise of the Arab League has been the collection of Ministers of Interior passing on information to each other in order to enhance the repression in our societies, so it's not, Azmi, that the Arab League is benign. The Arab League is offering a confederation for passing on very severe information about our citizens and to that extent and to the extent of the fact that it is perpetuating through also its apparatchiks of which you are, Mr. Youssef, it's perpetuating the dimension of authoritarianism, the lack of democracy, so it's not benign. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, let him answer that. HESHAM YOUSSEF So you mean that when the Arab League is disbanded, the Arab world will become a democracy? CHIBLI MALLAT They'll be much better off I think, yes. HESHAM YOUSSEF Why? CHIBLI MALLAT Because we won't have Ministers of Interior meeting in Cairo to pass on information on how to better arrest and torture a citizen. HESHAM YOUSSEF No, this is not what happens in the Ministries of Interiors. CHIBLI MALLAT Well, we're reading from different scripts. That's what I read, and what the gentleman has mentioned about the visas. You don't need to be a genius, when you arrive in a country in the Arab world, to see that the Europeans get through and the Arabs don't get through. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, let him answer. HESHAM YOUSSEF You see, these are all people who have difficulties moving from one Arab country to another, and I agree, it is a problem, but this is not a justification to say that whether the Ministers of Interiors, all what they do is convey information to each other. What is happening in the Arab League is the creation of hundreds of networks. You don't like this one; I have 200 more that have been working on all kinds of issues that are beneficial, whether it's the Ministers of Communication, Ministers of Tourism, Ministers of Health to address the bird flu. If you dismantled the Arab League, how would you address the issue of the bird flu when the Ministers of Health cannot meet? But that's the environment that we allow. We allow a network for people of all kinds of walks of life, whether it's governmental, and I have to tell you ... TIM SEBASTIAN All right, we don't want to get into bird flu. There's a gentleman up there who has a question, he's been waiting patiently for a while. Can we get a microphone to him please? AUDIENCE Q (M) Why do we need to keep a League that allows foreign governments to interfere with us and with our countries? Isn't this a clear indication to the failure of this League and its huge weakness in solving our interior problems and building trust between the Arab countries, and in letting others decide their fate and get what they want from this region? TIM SEBASTIAN Azmi Bishara. Follows on from the question before. AZMI BISHARA I want to follow, yes, I want to follow on that question because something was said about citizens not moving etc. The Arab borders, borders between Arab countries are designed against Arab citizens, so you want to divide more? I don't understand because it doesn't have a lot to do with democracy, because semi-democratic Arab states are more harsh on the borders, for example reformed Jordan etc. Syria allows every Arab citizen without a visa to enter, and it's not a democratic country. It has to do with nationalist ideology. Now, Arab borders are designed against Arab citizens so the treatment is no Arab identity and no Arab identity, this is a symptom of low Arab unity that these borders are designed by colonialism and if they're analysing them this way, because Arab countries keep interfering in each other's cases in political issues etc. etc., and because they think they are rivals in internal issues ... TIM SEBASTIAN The question was, why keep an organisation that allows that to happen? AZMI BISHARA No, no, the question was, why keep an organisation which allows foreigners, foreign powers to interfere, and it's exactly this organisation which was all the time against foreign interference in the Arab world, for example one case is Darfur, one case where it was here accused, the Arab League was accused here of not allowing political interference in Darfur. TIM SEBASTIAN Let's bring the questioner back in again. AZMI BISHARA It was now argued against the Arab League, the issue of Darfur. Exactly this point was taken against the Arab League by people who want to dismantle the Arab League. TIM SEBASTIAN You've got a point and then I'll come very quickly to you. AUDIENCE Q (M) My question was why do we keep this League? It shows failure, it shows weakness. Why should I be proud that such a League representing others interferes in my country and my states, or why is there no trust between the Arab states? We have conflicts. If the Arab League can't solve the conflicts, how can we face the world? Our reputation is spoilt for the other people in the western countries. We have to fix this and the Arab League is like sleeping in this case. AZMI BISHARA You are talking with somebody who is not represented in the Arab League and certainly not proud of the Arab League. Now, the motion was not whether we should be proud about the Arab League or we should not be proud about the Arab League. TIM SEBASTIAN But you want to keep it and he says why do you want to keep it? You're voting for that motion. AZMI BISHARA Yes well, yes, exactly, but keeping the Arab League, as I say, it's the only organisation which is there, having the Arab states together, reminding us of the fact that there is something in common between Arabs, not only in the language and in culture but also in the political dream and yearning for some better life in the future. TIM SEBASTIAN Shafeeq Ghabra is going to come in here. AZMI BISHARA It's part of dismantling our identity. TIM SEBASTIAN I think Ghabra has been very patient. SHAFEEQ GHABRA And Azmi sounds like he's in the Israeli Knesset. TIM SEBASTIAN Please, have your say. SHAFEEQ GHABRA But anyway, it is an issue. Commonality of Arabs in the Arab League, lack of teamwork, disputes, lack of agreements, lack of efficiency, lack of ability to solve any serious problem in the Arab world, so you see, when the question from the gentleman over there was very clear on the Arab League if you compare with Europe. Luckily, luckily Europe didn't have the Arab League. Luckily what Europe had was an organisation that is for economics, for economic activity, economics came first, jobs, education, development, human integration, and that is how Europe evolved. AZMI BISHARA Europe had two world wars, very destructive, the holocaust was in Europe. What you had after that is democratic regimes who formed the unity, democratic regimes you don't have, we did not have first the European unity and then democracy. You had democratic regimes who formed European unity, that's what you had, but you don't have an Arab League in Europe, it's too much. TIM SEBASTIAN We really do need to hear from the other side, thank you. Azmi Bishara, let the other side speak, please. It's supposed to be democratic here at least. Thank you. SHAFEEQ GHABRA In a way if I hear you well, Azmi, what you are saying: 'We're going to go through hell and through many wars before we really start to see the hope' and I believe there is agreement that it can happen in democracy and development and it will happen very soon, and this is the time for change, and that's part of it. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, gentleman in the second row, thank you very much, gentleman in the second row, we'll get a microphone to you, please. AUDIENCE Q (M) Good evening. Mr. Hesham, with regards to you, you talk about success stories economically between the Arab states, but on the other hand, all of us over here I think do agree that with regards to political issues, the Arab League has failed miserably. What do you plan on doing, being an active member in the Arab League or being the head of Mr. Amre Moussa's office? HESHAM YOUSSEF Which political issues particularly are you focusing on? AUDIENCE Q (M) We're talking about Iraq, we're talking about Lebanon, we're talking about Darfur, you have a lot of political crises, issues that are happening all around the Arab states, and there is no ground stand that the Arab League is taking. I feel that the Arab states do not respect the Arab League itself, because they do not empower you. What do you people plan on doing? HESHAM YOUSSEF Let me maybe a minute and talk about the 4 or 5 main issues that we are facing now. Let me start by the Arab/Israeli conflict and the situation in Palestine. As a result of the elections, the United States, the European Union decided not to assist the Palestinian Authority. We decided otherwise, and we decided that we will support the Palestinian Authority and we are helping the Palestinian Authority and we're trying to transfer money to the Palestinian Authority. We have been receiving phone calls every single day, they haven't received their salaries until this very day, so we're working on it and we will transfer assistance to the Palestinian people. In the last five years, the Arab League transferred $1.5 billion to the Palestinian people. It may not be enough, because the suffering is much greater than that, but this is what we are doing. In relation to Iraq, we have been working on the conference for accord and reconciliation. The preparative meeting was held in Cairo. The conference itself is supposed to take place in Iraq. We were waiting for the formation of the government. We still are waiting. There has been some progress, and we hope that in the very near future this government will be in place and we will be able to continue our efforts in order to achieve reconciliation and accord. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, let me come back to the questioner. Are you impressed with what you've heard? AUDIENCE Q (M) No. I mean, conferences, meetings have been going on for the last 20, 30, 40, 50, 60 years, and nothing comes out of it genuinely. I mean, when Mr. Ghabra was talking about travelling between the GCC states with the ID, this took us almost 20 years to come about, and we're talking about six states. We talk the same language we are brothers, cousins, we have the same culture, the same traditions, six states, took them 20 years to come up with a single ID card and have normal borders except for Saudi that we still cannot go through with this card, so what do you expect for 22 countries to come in and get one single issue that is anything to help us as citizens of the Arab nation, to help us commute, to help us, something politically that put us together and unites us as one country. We don't see this happening today. TIM SEBASTIAN I don't think he was impressed. HESHAM YOUSSEF Well, Tim, he asked on two things that do not coincide. He asked about the political issues which as far as I'm concerned are the Arab/Israeli conflict, the situation in Iraq, the situation in Darfur, the situation between Syria and Lebanon and so on, and this is what I was trying to respond to, but then in the second half of his intervention he talked about movement of people and things that are of a different nature. Now, I know people are sick of conferences, but when I talk about reconciliation ... AZMI BISHARA But you see, in Qatar to be sick of conferences, every day there are three conferences here. HESHAM YOUSSEF No, but this is important. When I talk about a conference for reconciliation and accord in Iraq, this is not just a conference where governments are invited to make speeches, no. These are people who were unable to sit together around the same table for years and years and years, and the Arab League has succeeded in bringing them together around the same table to talk to each other, and as far as I'm concerned, this was a major breakthrough and it was considered a major breakthrough by the Iraqis themselves, not by us, not by those who are participating only, but by the whole world as well. They thought this was a real achievement. If you want me to go on ... TIM SEBASTIAN OK, no. Shafeeq Ghabra, come in here, please. SHAFEEQ GHABRA I mean, just all I can add here is that the Arab League is like a heavy dinosaur. It will not be able to move things, it will never be able to address issues, it is based on 22 Arab states, they have so much disparity among them, so many differences among them. It is based on a very simple membership, it does not work. There is nothing related neither to human rights nor to style of governments nor to economic development. The GCC has a different formula. It works better, though it takes time, it works much better. I would say, if we decentralise after disbanding, we will be much better off, whether the North African, whether the Syrian Levant area, and try to start coming back from more smaller entities into something better and focus on economics will come better ... TIM SEBASTIAN What makes you think that will work? SHAFEEQ GHABRA Because the GCC works, and because this is the way, you will be lighter, you will be more able to address bilateral issues, multi-lateral issues, and you will be able to have a better view of decision-making, you will be able to have a better membership structure. You see, even if the entire Arab world goes democratic, the Arab League is not going to work, because the Arab League is based on wrong foundations when it comes to decide the voting, the membership, the entire structure. TIM SEBASTIAN Please don't speak both at the same time. SHAFEEQ GHABRA But I have a point that I need to complete. Even the bird flu that he talks about in terms of the Arab world, as if he is saying that Iran or Turkey doesn't have bird flu. TIM SEBASTIAN Let's not go down route of the bird flu. Thank you. Let him finish. HESHAM YOUSSEF Who said that we are against the GCC having a great success and the Arab League is having a great success. As far as I'm concerned these are building blocks and they can go and co-operate and integrate as much as they can and as much as they wish, and as far as I'm concerned, this helps Arab interests, and if it helps Arab interests, it's nice. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, gentleman at the back, you've had your hand up for a long time. AUDIENCE Q (M) Thank you. The issue what Mr. Hesham said, that the Arab League is not stopping countries to reform but themselves, then my question is, don't you mean that it's the responsibility of the Arab League to push member countries towards reform and to solve their problems? HESHAM YOUSSEF Absolutely, that's our job. This is what we're trying to do. We fail in many cases, we succeed in others, but this does not mean that we're not trying, in all walks of life. In the last summit in Khartoum, it was decided also to start tackling the issue of education, and the issue of research and development in the area of science and technology. There are many things that we need to work on. All of them have some kind of activity within the Arab framework in all kinds of networks that I talked about, whether it's, and this is not only limited to government, this applies also to all kinds of federations, Federation of Doctors, Federation of Lawyers, Federation of, you name it, are also co-operating in the Arab world. TIM SEBASTIAN Let me go back to the questioner, do you feel that the Arab League should be disbanded? AUDIENCE Q (M) I feel that it should not be disbanded because I think at least it provides a platform, we should work towards reform, that we can at least try to change and bring something positive. TIM SEBASTIAN Shafeeq Ghabra. SHAFEEQ GHABRA You see, what you're saying, Hesham, that the Arab League stands for reform. HESHAM YOUSSEF Absolutely. SHAFEEQ GHABRA It has failed to reform itself. It has not done a single thing about reform. HESHAM YOUSSEF What do you know about the reform of the Arab League? SHAFEEQ GHABRA Let me tell you what I know. I think the Arab League should start by establishing an organisation for human rights and issue a report annually on the state of human rights in the Arab world, can you do that? I challenge you to do that. HESHAM YOUSSEF Absolutely. Let me respond. TIM SEBASTIAN Don't argue amongst yourselves, please. HESHAM YOUSSEF The point is, now we have a new human rights charter. It is not yet into effect because it has to be ratified by government, and it includes mechanisms for all of human rights practices in the Arab world, so this is a step. We created Arab parliament. Many have criticised the Arab parliament, but it is a step as far as I'm concerned, it's a step in the right direction. We are trying to integrate civil society in all the activities of the Arab League. TIM SEBASTIAN OK, Chibli Mallat. CHIBLI MALLAT Well, I think, you know, talking in 2006 about the first step that includes for instance education, talking about how to improve the issue of science in the Arab world, let alone about producing human rights, where you come from, today the judges are on the defensive, are being harassed and beaten up, and you're coming and talking seriously to us that the Arab League that is based in Cairo is tackling seriously to the issue of the judges in the country. HESHAM YOUSSEF This is not serious. CHIBLI MALLAT You are thinking that these people don't read, don't think. You transform white into black and tell us that today, in 2006, we are starting as Arab League with new steps and be patient, perhaps in 3006 we will have the human right report. TIM SEBASTIAN Gentleman in the third row there, we'll get a microphone to you. AUDIENCE Q (M) Thank you very much. I think for the people against the motion, you've been talking so much about successes in the Arab League, and you just mentioned about physicians and doctors. I just happen to be a medical doctor, and I was the President of the Pan-Arab Union Against Cancer, and I had to walk away from it after 3 months. Two meetings in Cairo, everybody is fighting, it was purely political. We did not achieve anything. Every time we go for a meeting, the Jordanian doesn't want to speak to the Syrian, the Syrian doesn't want the Saudi, Saudi doesn't want the Qatari, and it just went on like this with a representative from the Arab League that did not achieve anything. And just one note, Tim, on the avian flu, believe me, nothing happened. I happen to be the Chairman of the National Committee for the Avian Flu. We went to Egypt four times. Every time we came up with a resolution, nothing comes up, so we had to take our action into our own hands for the country. Thank you. TIM SEBASTIAN Hesham Youssef, you want to say something? HESHAM YOUSSEF Excellent point. So now, absolutely. TIM SEBASTIAN And the answer is? HESHAM YOUSSEF No, no. You see, we have to be serious. I'm not here to provide all the answers. This point is very telling of the situation. This is not the problem of the Arab League. This is a problem of a number of Arab governments that came and differed and did not implement what they agreed on. Then you come and blame the Arab League. We came, the Arab countries, and nothing happened. Were we supposed to take the steps or were Arab governments supposed to take the steps? You tell me. AUDIENCE Q (M) If we cannot achieve a simple thing when it comes to healthcare ... HESHAM YOUSSEF Who is 'we'? AUDIENCE Q (M) The Arab League. Why do I have to meet under the umbrella of the Arab League when I can take my own decisions? HESHAM YOUSSEF But I provide an umbrella. AUDIENCE Q (M) So every time we are told we are working alone, we are not working under the Arab League or even the GCC, believe me, I'm not happy with the GCC, because as our colleague here has said, 20 years just to travel with an ID, so it will take us another hundred years to have economic borders being taken away and, you know, please, I want you to say something, how can we reform this Arab League in order for us not to say, 'No, it's time to unplug.' HESHAM YOUSSEF This was my first point. AUDIENCE Q (M) But you're working there, you have tell us something. HESHAM YOUSSEF Yes, this is what I'm telling you. This is why I thought right from the start that this motion is based on the wrong premise. You are coming to say, 'Let's reform the Arab League,' while I think, if we look at the Arab world, analyse the situation, we should be saying, 'Let's have reform in the Arab world. Let's reform the Arab world in all its dimensions, politically, economically, socially,' this is exactly what I said, but what you're saying is, 'Well, we came to the Arab League and nothing happened because we differed amongst ourselves as governments,' so what should I do? As an Arab League official, when I come to a room where governments are there and they're supposed to reach a conclusion for the interest of their people and they don't. AUDIENCE Q (M) We'll get away beyond government. Let's talk about physicians, doctors cannot agree on anything. HESHAM YOUSSEF Well, if the doctors can't agree, you want me to force them to agree? AUDIENCE Q (M) Well, you have to take measures. You have to tell me, 'If you are a member of the Arab League, you have to abide by these or otherwise I don't want you to be in the Arab League.' HESHAM YOUSSEF But that's the whole point. I am an umbrella. AUDIENCE Q (M) But you didn't come up with it, nobody came up with it. Did an Arab League secretary general resign and say, 'Thank you, I'm a big failure, this will not work, let's walk away from it,' or enjoy the privileges, enjoy the private jets, enjoy flying around and being present for photo ops and that's it? HESHAM YOUSSEF Well, I would love to tell you about the privileges that we enjoy. AUDIENCE Q (M) Not you, maybe not you. Others are enjoying it. HESHAM YOUSSEF No, no, I'm talking even about the secretary general who was very reluctant in the renewal. AUDIENCE Q (M) That's a debatable point, sir. HESHAM YOUSSEF Exactly, so if you want to debate it we're ready to debate it. AUDIENCE Q (M) I think the secretary general is doing well. TIM SEBASTIAN 'The gentleman at the back, yes. AUDIENCE Q (M) The poor position of the organisation is a reflection of the poor position of its members. Now if I'm ugly, and let's hope I'm not, I look at myself in the mirror, I will only see the reflected image my ugly self and what should I do about it? I don't know, get a nose job or lose weight but certainly not break the mirror. This is nonsense, and this is the case. Another question to Mr. Ghabra. Doesn't he think that disbanding the League in this critical time of history is just like committing suicide and hand over the great legacy of the Arab nation into a horrible power, the power of terrorism or who are prevailing in our society, who only use religion to implement their dark agents and finally, having an organisation of no political value, or let me rephrase it, having an organisation of political incapacity, does not necessarily require its cancellation, or else what have the British kept their Royal establishment for? Thank you. TIM SEBASTIAN All right. Shafeeq Ghabra, quick answer. SHAFEEQ GHABRA You see, it's the wrong example, though you have the right intentions. Let me clarify. You're standing in a house, the umbrella he's talking about, it is full of holes, all the rain is coming at you, the umbrella isn't working. For God's sake, wouldn't you change the umbrella? Wouldn't you change the umbrella? So let us change the umbrella and look for a new umbrella that can manage, and what some of you have been saying regarding initiatives, grass root initiatives, state to state initiatives, local initiatives, bi-lateral initiatives, multi-lateral initiatives, let's go around. You see, let's do that in order to find ourselves in a better situation, but don't tell me that you cannot change the umbrella or that you cannot find something else. TIM SEBASTIAN All right. I want to go to just one last quick question from the lady in the third row there. AUDIENCE Q (F) My question for the people who are for the motion. Yes, there are lots of achievements for the Arab League but there are still lots of failures, it's way more than the achievements. I'm not saying here that the Arab League should be disbanded but they should be more improvements to behold, to become more positive and positive outlook, yes. TIM SEBASTIAN Chibli Mallat, final word. CHIBLI MALLAT I think that the problem, and it's a problem that joins the position that Azmi has been defending, I don't think my identity as an Arab will be worse off if the Arab League did not exist. On the contrary, I think the Arab League as it stands is such a sham that it projects an image of me as an adult that is so poor that it deserves to be disbanded. So the issue of improvement is one which is not on the table unfortunately. The structure of the Arab League and the failure of the Arab League are so deep today, so that unless you unplug, as the good doctor suggested, we're going nowhere.
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