Gulf News

UN urged to help protect minorities

ABU DHABI CONFERENCE ON MINORITIES ADOPTS 14-CHAPTER GLOBAL CHARTER FOR MUSLIM COMMUNITIE­S

- BY BINSAL ABDUL KADER Senior Reporter

Abu Dhabi Conference on Minorities, attended by 550 delegates from 140 nations, adopts charter for Muslim communitie­s

Aglobal conference on Muslim minorities yesterday adopted a ‘Global Charter for Muslim Communitie­s’ urging the United Nations to make a binding agreement for protecting rights and freedom of minorities as religious, ethnic and linguistic groups, and to prevent racial and religious discrimina­tion.

The global agreement should prevent the abuse of religion and criminalis­e all kinds of ethnic cleansing, according the charter adopted by the Internatio­nal Congress on Muslim Minorities that ended in Abu Dhabi yesterday.

Around 550 delegates from 140 nations across the world who attended the two-day conference discussed the provisions of the charter and approved them.

The conference condemned all acts of terrorism and extremism in all forms.

Participan­ts agreed that the main objective of the conference was to integrate Muslim minorities with societies they live in and achieve safety security, peace and respect for multicultu­ralism, said Dr Rashid Al Nuaimi, chairman of the higher committee of the conference, who announced the charter in the closing session.

The 14-chapter charter will act as a practical reference and guide for future actions of the World Council of Muslim Minorities based in Abu Dhabi, which was launched in April to address challenges faced by around 500 million Muslims living outside the Islamic world.

Call to nations

The Council will act as an internatio­nal institutio­n to coordinate all institutio­ns of Muslim communitie­s in non-Muslim countries.

The charter calls upon all world nations to incorporat­e its provisions in their domestic laws and create specific laws, if necessary, to protect the rights of minorities.

It urges Muslims to fulfil their national duty to their societies and nations to achieve peace and security, and work hard to protect their children from extremist and terrorist elements.

The charter envisages a ‘civilisati­onal model’ to encourage Muslim communitie­s to contribute to the renaissanc­e of their countries, and to correct the distorted image of Islam and Muslims.

It also asks Muslims to bridge the intellectu­al, cultural and social gap between Muslims and other communitie­s.

Moderate principles

The charter calls upon the Council to develop a strategic plan to mobilise cultural action in Muslim societies and revamp the religious discourse based on moderate principles.

The Council has been asked to develop and activate a strategic plan to coordinate among all relevant institutio­ns, especially internatio­nal Islamic organisati­ons.

The participan­ts of conference also recommende­d the Council and all relevant parities to take practical steps to address the conditions that cause the spread of extremism and terrorism in all forms, by eradicatin­g their roots.

They also urged to accelerate the efforts of internatio­nal cultural organisati­ons to strengthen dialogue, tolerance, understand­ing between religions and civilisati­ons.

 ?? Ahmed Kutty/Gulf News ?? From left: Tariq Al Kurdi, president of the United Nations Conference on Minority Issues in the World; Abdul Nasser Mousa Abu Al Basal, Jordan’s Minister of Endowments, Islamic Affairs and Holy Places, and Dr Hafis Arkeebi of Morocco’s University of...
Ahmed Kutty/Gulf News From left: Tariq Al Kurdi, president of the United Nations Conference on Minority Issues in the World; Abdul Nasser Mousa Abu Al Basal, Jordan’s Minister of Endowments, Islamic Affairs and Holy Places, and Dr Hafis Arkeebi of Morocco’s University of...

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