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“The document would be published three months late and not as an official UN Development Program report,” said Fergani.
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CAIRO,
December 22 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Succumbing to
pressures from the United States and Egypt, the United Nations decided
to give up a development report on the Arab world, which is highly
critical of both countries, according to the report’s chief author.
Nadir
Fergani, the author of the UN-commissioned report on freedom and
governance in the Arab world, said that as a result of the mounting
pressures from Cairo and Washington, the document would be published
three months late in January and not as an official UN Development
Program report, reported Agence France-Presse (AFP) Tuesday, December
21.
“They
threatened to considerably reduce their financial contribution to the
United Nations’ development budget,” if the report was published
by the UN, Fergani, an Egyptian university professor of sociology,
told reporters.
Fergani
told Reuters on December 18 Washington had already punished
the UNDP by withholding $12 million as it did not like the
previous report.
“My
understanding is that this time they are threatening a much heavier
penalty - the entire US contribution to the UNDP budget, or $100
million,” he had said.
The
United States, however, denied Tuesday opposing the publication of the
report.
“We
have not seen a draft of the forthcoming UN Arab Human Development
Report,” Lou Fintor, a State Department spokesman, told AFP.
“We
have not urged 'deferral' of the report as alleged.”
The
Bush administration is already beleaguered by reports on tapping the
phones of top UN officials and covering up abuse of prisoners in
Afghanistan.
The
Washington Post said December 12 that Washington spied
on UN chief nuclear inspector Mohammad El-Baradei during
conversations with Iranian officials.
In
the run-up to the US-led invasion of Iraq, US major ally Britain
bugged UN chief Kofi Annan’s office.
US
Objections
Another
member of the authors team, however, said the United States objected
to the condemnation of Israeli aggressions in the Palestinian
territories and a passage on the negative implication of the US
occupation of Iraq on freedoms in the Arab world.
“The
UNDP representative informed us during the team's meeting earlier this
month in Amman that his agency cannot publish the report because of US
threats to stop its contribution to the UNDP, which represents 70
percent of the budget,” Nur Farahat, a law professor at Zagazig
University, told the Middle East Online.
UNDP
spokesman William Orme has admitted that both Washington and the
Egyptian government voiced concern over various parts of the report.
Farahat
supervised the drafting of the legal aspects of the document entitled
“Towards Consolidating Freedom in the Arab World.”
He
said the report's authors and consultants would meet in Beirut Sunday
and Monday, December 27, to review final preparations for launching
the document.
It
was reported that Cairo, for its part, had objected to references to
the “inheritance of power in Egypt,” hinting at the son of
incumbent President Hosni Mubarak, Gamal.
Cairo
has also objected to the report’s open criticism of government
opposition to an effective political participation of some groups like
the Muslim Brotherhood.