Tehran
Summit Takes Aim at US, West
India PM Manmohan Attends
Leaders from many of the world’s developing
states gather in Tehran from Thursday for a two-day summit expected to sharply
attack the policies of the United States and other top developed countries.
As he left for Tehran on Tuesday, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh referred to the NAM’s desire to see power
shifted from the UN Security Council to the broader UN General Assembly.
“The outdated structures of global
governance have not been able to keep pace with contemporary political and
economic challenges” and reform was needed, he said.
Singh added that he would also hold bilateral meetings with
Iranian leaders. India is the second-biggest buyer after China of Iranian oil,
which is hit by Western sanctions.
Host nation Iran, in particular, is hailing the Non-Aligned
Movement (NAM) meeting as a blow to Western efforts to isolate it over its
disputed nuclear activities.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei will open the summit
with a speech to more than 30 heads of state or government, including Egypt’s
new president, Mohamed Morsi, and the leaders of
India, Pakistan, Lebanon, Sudan and Zimbabwe, according to organisers.
North Korea, Venezuela and Syria - all Iranian allies - will
be represented by senior officials but not their top leaders.
Key issues on the agenda include: a condemnation of Western
sanctions on Iran and other NAM countries, a new push to quell the conflict in
Syria, and a reaffirmation of calls to make UN decision-making more globally
democratic.
Morsi’s appearance will be the first time a leader from Egypt has
set foot in Iran since 1975. The two countries broke diplomatic ties in 1979,
the year Cairo took in Iran’s toppled shah following the Islamic revolution,
and signed a peace accord with Israel.
The NAM, created in 1961 by a group of nations that saw
themselves as nonaligned with Cold War rivals the United States and the Soviet Union, today counts 120 nations, including “Palestine”.
It represents nearly two-thirds of the UN’s 193 member states
- which explains why UN chief Ban Ki-moon will be also
present in Tehran as an observer, despite criticism from Israel and the United
States.
Ban will meet Khamenei, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad
and other officials and press them to take “urgent” action on their nuclear
drive and on human rights.
Other observers to the summit include envoys from Russia and
China - and from Australia, which is vying for a temporary UN Security Council
seat.
Morsi will be staying just four hours in Tehran, according to his
spokesman.
That will be enough time to transfer the three-year NAM
presidency from Egypt to Iran, but likely not enough to establish the sort of
ties that Iran wants with the Islamist-minded Egyptian president.