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A handout picture provided by the Iranian presidency on 3 July shows President Hassan Rouhani chairing a cabinet meeting in the capital Tehran. Rouhani said Iran will exceed the uranium enrichment limit it agreed in a 2015 deal with major powers, raising it - AFP
KUALA LUMPUR, AFP: The president of sanctions-hit Iran last week called for Muslim countries to cooperate in fighting US “economic terrorism” at the opening of a summit aimed at tackling the Islamic world’s woes.
Hundreds of delegates are attending the gathering in Malaysia – including heads of State and religious leaders – but the meeting has been snubbed by Saudi Arabia, home to Islam’s holiest shrines.
The summit has also been criticised for undermining the Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC), the Saudi-based global body representing Muslim nations and organisations.
Issues including the plight of Myanmar’s Rohingya and China’s mostly Muslim Uighur minority could be discussed, although, with massive Chinese infrastructure in many Islamic nations, criticism may be muted.
In opening remarks, Iran President Hassan Rouhani slammed Washington’s global clout.
“The American economic regime, and dollarisation of national and global economies, have provided the US with the possibility of advancing its hegemony under the threat of sanctions and economic terrorism,” he said.
The Muslim world needs to be saved “from the domination of the United States dollar, and the American financial regime”, he added, calling for greater financial cooperation between Islamic countries.
The US re-imposed crippling sanctions on Iran in 2018 after withdrawing from an international deal aimed at tackling the Islamic Republic’s nuclear program.
Iran’s economy has since suffered a sharp economic downturn, with a plummeting currency sending inflation skyrocketing.
Speaking later alongside other leaders, Rouhani listed areas where Muslim nations could work together, from the banking sector to the tourism industries.
He proposed that Muslim countries’ central banks could work together to introduce a unified cryptocurrency.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also suggested reducing dependence on the dollar, calling on Muslim countries to “free bilateral trade from foreign exchange pressure”.
“Instead of trade with foreign currencies, we would like to do foreign trade with our national currencies,” he said.
“We are trying to develop alternative payment systems with countries like Russia and China and Brazil.” Turkey’s lira plunged in value last year at a time of heightened tensions with the US, in one of the worst economic crises that Erdogan has faced in his long rule.
In his welcome address at the Kuala Lumpur event, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said that Muslim countries were “in a state of crisis, helpless and unworthy of this great religion which is meant to be good for mankind”.
He also insisted summit organisers were “not discriminating (against) or isolating anyone” after the absence of Saudi Arabia triggered speculation the meeting was aimed at countering the kingdom’s influence.
We have “invited almost all Muslim nations to participate in this summit, albeit at different levels”, he said.
With Saudi rivals Iran, Qatar and Turkey in attendance, analysts had suggested the meeting could be aimed at forming a rival bloc to the OIC.
There were signs Riyadh was worried, with Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan withdrawing from the gathering – reportedly after Saudi pressure.
Mahathir dismissed such concerns in a phone call this week with Saudi Arabia’s King Salman.
But the OIC, which has 57 members, launched a veiled attack Wednesday on the event, saying such gatherings would weaken Islam.