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Sarkozy, Mubarak launch Union for Mediterranean

By AFP
First Published: July 13, 2008
AFP PHOTO POOL ERIC FEFERBERG
French President Nicolas Sarkozy (L) welcomes his Egyptian counterpart Muhammad Hosni Mubarak for lunch in a restaurant, on July 12 in Paris, on the eve of the Paris summit of the Mediterranean countries. Leaders from some 40 countries — rich and poor, foes and friends — meet in Paris on Sunday to launch the Union for the Mediterranean, a flagship project of French President Nicolas Sarkozy. Background is the Elysee presidential palace general Secretary Claude Gueant.


PARIS: French President Nicolas Sarkozy and more than 40 leaders opened a summit on Sunday to launch a new union of Mediterranean nations amid hopes it could bring fresh impetus to Middle East peace efforts.


Flanked by President Hosni Mubarak and United Nations chief Ban Ki-moon, Sarkozy urged the leaders — representing some 756 million people — to set aside their differences and work toward a common future.


"The entire world is watching you," he said. And the question they were asking, he added, was this: "Is this generation of political leaders up to the challenge of peace?"


Sarkozy said Arab states had made a "gesture of peace" by attending the inaugural summit of the Union for the Mediterranean and that European leaders would "build peace in the Mediterranean, just as yesterday we built peace in Europe."


Leaders meeting under the glass dome of the Grand Palais in Paris were to agree on joint projects, rather than big political goals, with the focus squarely on economic cooperation.


But the new union was also seen as a forum that could help promote peace in the Middle East.


Mubarak called for Israelis and Palestinians to step up their efforts to reach a peace deal that would pave the way for the creation of a Palestinian sate.
Libyan leader Moamer Qaddafi boycotted the meeting, while Jordan's King Abdullah II and King Mohammed VI of Morocco sent senior representatives.


To sidestep differences between Israel and its Arab neighbors, the new forum will concentrate on a series of modest regional projects such as cleaning up pollution in the Mediterranean sea or developing solar energy.
Drawing up a final declaration has proved difficult, with references in a draft version to the fight against weapons of mass destruction likely to be cut out, or watered down.


Some partners remain reluctant to take part in projects with Israel.
Most emphasis in the draft text is on raising the public profile of the forum, by setting up a joint presidency — with France and Egypt set to take the first turn — and organizing summits every two years.


A secretariat will also be created to supervise the projects, but its composition, size and location are not to be decided before November.
– AFP


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