The 120-member Non-Aligned Movement (NAM) had gathered
in Tehran for a two-day summit on August. On the agenda are the Syrian crisis, human
rights and nuclear disarmament.
Iran hopes the high-profile event
will prove that attempts by the West to punish it economically for its
disputed nuclear programme have failed.
But there is already discord over Syria when Mohamed Morsi, the Egyptian
president, called for "solidarity with the struggle of the Syrian
people" against what he called Bashar al-Assad's "oppressive regime".
Iran
is a key backer of the Syrian government, and Morsi's speech prompted
the Syrian delegation to walk out of the meeting in protest.
The US and Israel tried to discourage members of the NAM from attending the event in the Iranian capital.
The
NAM summit, held for nations not allied to any major power bloc – is
seen as a tool to advance the interests of developing nations.
Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, outlining clearly what was at
stake in the Syrian conflict, called on all states to stop supplying
weapons to all sides in the Syrian conflict, saying: "Now we face the
grim risk of civil war, destroying Syria's rich tapestry of communities.
Those who provide arms to either side in Syria are contributing to the
misery. Further militarisation is not the answer."
Ban met Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, the Iranian president, and Ayatollah Ali
Khamenei, Iran's supreme leader, and expressed concerns about Iran's
human rights record and urged Khamenei to take concrete steps to prove
Iran's nuclear work is peaceful.
Khamenei who also spoke at the summit, accused the UN Security Council
of being outmoded and controlled by the US, and reiterated Iran's rights
to a peaceful nuclear energy programme.
He said: "I repeat that
[Iran] is not developing capabilities for nuclear weapons, but also will
not overlook the rights of its people and their need for access to
peaceful nuclear energy. Our motto is nuclear energy for all and nuclear
weapons is for none. We stand by both of these mottos, and we know that
breaking the bias views that some foreign countries hold about the
production of nuclear energy and the underlying fundamentals is to the
benefit of all nations."
In this episode Justicelink asks: How will the NAM summit boost Iran's image?

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