STATEMENT BY AHMAD CHALABI, HEAD OF THE IRAQI DELEGATION,
TO THE 58TH UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY
In the name of God, the merciful and
benevolent.
Mr. President, Your Excellencies, Ladies and
Gentlemen:
I stand in front of you today representing
the voice of the Iraqi citizen who has long suffered from cruelty within and
outside his homeland. Those within his country have inflicted on him the worst
kinds of torture: they have attacked his honour, betrayed his family, humiliated
him, enchained him and thrown him into miserable wars. His brothers and friends
in the region not only maintained silence, ignorance and blindness toward his
catastrophe, they also criticised him and shamed him the day he dared raise his
voice. And throughout the world, those that stood to benefit scrambled to trade
and work with his torturer.
Very few spoke the truth and embraced it.
Very few turned to the catastrophe of this fellow human being and declared that
he was a victim. To our calls we heard nothing. So the Iraqi remained lost and
persecuted twice over, first from the injustice of the sword with which the
dictatorial regime attacked him at home, and then from the injustice of the
criticism, a more painful affliction, from those outside. But the Iraqi did not
give up, rather he was persistent and patient and he continued his struggle with
his thoughts, words and actions to achieve liberation, the foremost ideal that
he has always yearned for.
I stand today before you expressing to you
as much as possible the voice of this Iraqi individual, declaring with him and
for him the end of silence. I ask you all to listen to him, one by
one.
I come today to present you with four
essential truths and to demonstrate through these truths two fundamental
rights.
The first truth that I begin with is that
As for the second truth, it is that the
liberation of
The third truth is that the liberation came
as an embodiment of a universal national Iraqi will. It came as a result of the
vigorous efforts undertaken by the Iraqi opposition to Saddam Hussein�s regime
during many long years, when hundreds of thousands of martyrs were sacrificed.
The martyr Ayatollah Muhammad Bakr al-Hakim and his companions were not the last
to be sacrificed, may God�s mercy be upon them. They added another page to the
register of Iraqi bravery on August 29th, the day of the Iraqi
martyr. Nor was the martyr Akila al-Hashemi, who would have been in this chamber
today, spared from death.
There is no doubt for us to confirm that
removing Saddam�s regime is the culmination of a national Iraqi will that
insisted on removing the nightmare from the chest of the nation. And from here
stems the fourth truth, that the fall of the regime is only a beginning for the
birth of a new
Today, in
The land of the two rivers, the cradle of
civilisation in Sumer, Akkad, Babylon and Assyria, the land of peace, the land
of the Caliphate and the house of wisdom, the home of Hammurabi�s code and the
depository of continuous knowledge, literature, poetry and intellectual
achievement depends first and foremost on its human resources before its natural
and oil resources. Based on this human wealth,
The
In the previous period, in
Iraqis like others insist on their rights
for Dignity, Freedom, Justice and Peace. Asserting these rights is the
foundation for tomorrow�s
As with dignity, so too freedom. Freedom is
not a gift from the ruler and the state. It is a principle, a basis and the
essence of a human being. Responsible freedom that does not impinge upon the
freedom of others is the core of the social contract. Despite the excesses that
outsiders and infiltrators have inflicted, with the fall of the repressive
regime, Iraqis have proven to themselves that freedom is not chaos.
As is the individual�s instinct for freedom,
so is his demand for justice. Justice will be a basic tenet that ensures the
neutrality and independences of the judiciary. The previous regime took away
justice, making the apparatuses of the state means of repression and
control.
Last but not least, and after wretched wars
that took people�s lives and destroyed nations and created catastrophes in their
wake, the new
We take responsibility that
The Iraqi woman is capable of achievement,
excellence and generosity of spirit. She can take on all responsibilities in the
nation. It is the duty of the society and the state to remove additional burdens
blocking her way.
The constant dialogue required between the
Iraqi citizen and the state that represents him and serves him will be on the
basis of an honest, democratic and representational system. This system stands
on the principle of separation of powers and upholds elections as the as the
ultimate arbiter. We are not concerned simply with democratic appearances, but
more so the safety of the political system as the embodiment of the democratic
spirit. The pillars of this system are first, a separation of powers, by writing
a constitutional framework that ensures non-interference between the judicial,
legislative, executive powers. This forms a sound basis for each to oversee the
other. Second, ensuring accountability, starting with the above mentioned
supervision and going through elections that form the main entry of the
individual in participation in politics and finally arriving at empowering civil
society through the free press, unions and independent institutions. These will
take the role of monitor, critic and pursuer of political power in its many
faces. The third pillar is to uphold transparency as a fundamental principle
stemming from the fact that the source of sovereignty is the citizen. The state
is there to serve him and it is answerable to him. It is his right to inquire
about its affairs and it is not within the right of the state to withhold such
information. Fourth is to respect the rights of the minority in relation to the
majority. Here it is important to distinguish between a political majority and
minority and a factional majority and minority. Political majorities and
minorities are those that are exposed through the ballot box, not through
population census and not through a random correlation between them. It is not
in anyone�s authority to demand a political right on the basis of a presumed
factional majority. We do not want a political, sectarian or national allocation
in
If the previous period was characterised by
limiting all powers to an abusive few in
Complementing our belief in federalism, and
in contrast to the nationalist excesses of the previous regime, we declare to
you all that
We seek to strengthen the rule of law and
institutions of governance. That is, that authority extending from the citizen
is emanated not usurped through a political office. This position is upheld
because of a legal basis, not because of the whims and opinions of the person
holding the position. The previous regime issued many arbitrary rules and
regulations based on the disposition of one man. The alternative in tomorrow�s
Last but not least, we will address the
relationship between religion and state in the new
In any case, the great civilisational heritage and
valuable cultural depository of Islamic jurisprudence is no doubt one of the
assets of
These are the main points of what we want
for our country. Our right today from the world is to demand help and
assistance, thanking all those that stood by Iraqis at their worst hour and
forgiving those that did not stand with us.
It is important for all the nations of the
world to acknowledge that what happened in
This is what we want of ourselves and what
we want from you on the road to a free, just and peaceful
We want an
We want an
We want an
We want an
We want an
May peace be upon
you.
Mr. President:
I stand before this Assembly as a representative
of free
To those who stood with the dictator and who continue to question the intentions of the American and British governments in undertaking this liberation, we invite you to come and visit the mass graves where half a million of our citizens lie, come and visit the dried up marshes, come and visit Halabja where chemicals were dropped on civilians, come and examine the lists of the disappeared whose right to live was taken away from them by Saddam Hussein. And we the Iraqi people will ask you why you chose to remain silent.
We are here today to declare that a new

