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Oleh/By		:	DATO' SERI DR. MAHATHIR BIN MOHAMAD 
Tempat/Venue 	: 	IN NEW YORK 
Tarikh/Date 	: 	29/09/82 
Tajuk/Title  	: 	THE 37TH. SESSION OF THE UNITED 
			NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY 




May I, at the outset, extend to you my sincere felicitations on your
unanimous election as President of this General Assembly. Your election
bears testimony to the recognition and respect that you enjoy as a
diplomat of outstanding ability. Under your wise presidency, I am
confident that this Assembly will be able to complete its work
successfully and with distinction. Your election is also an added honour
to your country with which Malaysia enjoys friendly relations. In
welcoming your election, I wish also to pay sincere tribute to Ambassador
Ismat Kittani, the outgoing President, for the outstanding manner in which
he had conducted the 36th. United Nations General Assembly.

2. Since the General Assembly last met, the international situation has
not improved. On the contrary, it has deteriorated even further. The world
continues to remain in the grip of crises of various kinds stemming from
unresolved political and military conflicts, economic stagnation and
recession, widespread poverty and privations, and various inequities, all
of which seem to defy solution. Through all these there is continued
escalation in armaments, consuming enormous funds and resources and
threatening mankind with destruction and possibly extinction. The United
Nations General Assembly, meeting against this backdrop, must get the full
backing of the members so as to reassert its authority and play its role
truly effectively.

3. As we look around us, we have to admit that this time international law
and order has truly broken down. Might is now the only thing that is
right. Weak countries like Afghanistan, Kampuchea and Lebanon are trodden
over by the boots of invading armies as the rest of the world stood by.

The economies of the poor nations are wrecked by recession resulting from
man-made policies in the powerful commercial and financial centres of the
world. The pleas of the poor are but secondary subjects for discussions by
the rich as they meet to plan their own world in the Cancuns and
Versailles of their world. And in Lebanon thousands of Palestinians are
murdered in the name of security for the Israelis and their cohorts.

4. There was a time when the United Nations sent a multi-nation force to
stop an invasion and did in fact succeed. But now it is
helpless. Resolution after resolution are passed by the various United
Nations committees but the invasion, the atrocities, and the economic
bullying go on. The credibility of the United 5. The need to restore faith
in the United Nations is very pressing. The United Nations must regain its
credibility.

5. I would like to say that countries like Malaysia must help restore the
trust and confidence of the international community in this Organisation's
ability to play a constructive role in resolving problems and crises and
in maintaining world peace and stability. But that would be pure
rhetoric. What is needed is the full backing of the powerful nations. They
must revitalise the Organisation which they created. They must breath life
into it by abiding by its decisions and lending it their weight.

6. In Southeast Asia the Kampuchean problem continues to pose a threat to
peace and security. Three times the United Nations General Assembly has
called for the total withdrawal of foreign forces and the exercise of
self-determination by the Kampuchean people. The International Conference
on Kampuchea (ICK) had laid down the principles for a political settlement
of the problem. But again those who are in a position to help achieve
political settlement have shown little concern for the accepted norms of
international practice.

7. The foreign military invasion and continued occupation of Kampuchea is
a crime against the Kampuchean people and a threat to regional peace and
security. It has brought in its wake big power rivalry into a region where
five peace-loving nations have agreed to a concept of a Zone of Peace,
Freedom and Neutrality. Members of ASEAN find in the Kampuchean problem an
insurmountable obstacle to their cherished dream of a conflict-free
neutral area.

8. The world must give serious attention to the situation still time for
members of the United Nations to act, they must do so. They must give
their stamp of approval to the valiant coalition that has been formed.

9. In consonance with the efforts for a peaceful settlement, Malaysia and
ASEAN are extremely gratified with the agreement reached among the three
resistance groups of Kampuchea to join hands in the coalition in which His
Highness Prince Sihanouk has assumed the Presidency of the Government of
Democratic Kampuchea. The determination, wisdom and above all the abiding
sense of patriotism of the three leaders to stand together to restore
freedom and honour to their country deserve our profound admiration.

Malaysia welcomes this development as it is a positive and an important
step towards the attainment of a political solution. Malaysia feels
honoured for being able to play host during the historic signing of the
declaration establishing the coalition by His Highness Prince Sihanouk,
His Excellency Son Sann and His Excellency Khieu Samphan on 22nd. June,
1982. I am indeed happy with the presence and participation of His
Highness Prince Norodom Sihanouk, President of Democratic Kampuchea and
the beloved leader of the Kampuchean people, at this session. I hope that
this august Assembly would respond appropriately and positively to his
noble cause. We await with keen anticipation his triumphant return to
Kampuchea to restore the freedom and independence of that country and the
honour and dignity of the Kampuchean people.

West Asia 

10. In West Asia, the situation has also taken a turn for the worse since
the General Assembly last met. For the umpteenth time since the
Palestinians were evicted from their homeland, they have been forced to
move from one refuge to another. Their rights as a people are still being
denied. They are not even treated as humans as the brutal massacres in the
Lebanon amply demonstrate.

11. We remember vividly the horrors of Belsen, Dachau and other Nazi
concentration camps of the second World War. We know of the sufferings of
the Jewish people then and the pogroms of centuries past. We were appalled
at the atrocities. Nevertheless, nobody, not even a people who had
suffered as much as the Jews had, have the right to inflict upon others
the horrors of Sabra and Shatila. The Palestinians and the Lebanese were
not responsible for Belsen or Dachau. Has the international community lost
its conscience that it can stand aloof while such horrors were perpetrated
against the helpless and the innocents. In order to assuage the conscience
of the anti-Semites the land of the Palestinians have already been taken
away from them to create a Jewish homeland. Must the Palestinians now be
butchered and driven from refuge to refuge. Must they also be
exterminated.

12. We understand the conscience which bothers the people who had once
been cruel to the Jews. We understand their need to make amends for their
past misdeeds. But are we going to condone massacres because we, or rather
the powerful nations of the world, are unwilling to hurt the feelings of
the Jews. Some may think that the massacres in the Sabra and Shatila camps
will satiate the Israelis and that they will go back to their Israel. This
can only be a wrong assumption. Recent history has shown, and the Israeli
going to be under constant threat and off and on they will be invaded and
atrocities committed against them. In the interest of Israeli security
there will be no security for its neighbours. Can we accept that only the
security of Israel is important, that its Arab neighbours have no right to
security.

13. Israel is a bully. If it is any bigger or stronger the world will not
be safe. I would, therefore, like to call upon the United States, as the
main supplier of weapons to Israel, to reconsider its position. Those
weapons are for nothing less than murder.

14. Apart from its systematic and premeditated use of lethal and sadistic
weapons on occupied Palestine and Arab territories, Israel continues to
propagate the myth of the non-existence of the Palestinian people and
thereby frustrate all peaceful efforts to find a just and enduring
settlement of the West Asian conflict. Indeed, the lesson we have learned
from the Israeli invasion of neighbouring Lebanon and the destruction of
Beirut is that if Israel is not stopped the West Asia problem will not
only continue but it will escalate until we are all swallowed up in the
conflagration.

15. At this point, Mr. President, I wish to pay homage to the valiant
Palestinian freedom fighters for their outstanding qualities of fortitude,
patriotism and courage in the face of overwhelming odds in their just
struggle for their inalienable rights. I also take this opportunity to
salute Chairman Yasser Arafat for his statesmanship, foresightedness and
courage in leaving Beirut in order to spare the civilian population of
that city from continued Israeli savagery. Unfortunately, the sacrifice
made by the PLO has been in vain.

16. Malaysia would also like to welcome the initiative taken at Fez
(Morocco) recently by Arab leaders, one that reflects the reasonableness
of their stand as much as their courage, statesmanship and above all their
reaffirmation of their commitments to the Charter of the United Nations
and to regional and international peace and security. This initiative
presents to the international community a formula which will enable the
Palestinians to return to their homes and freely exercise their God-given
inalienable rights in their own homeland, Palestine. The Israelis have of
course rejected the proposal outright. The world and the supporters of
Israel must prevail upon that habitually intransigent country to return to
sanity and the ways of civilisation.

Afghanistan

17. Mr. President, in Afghanistan too, we continue to witness another
example of the blatant use of force. There too, we continue to find the
misery and travails of a people locked in an unequal struggle to preserve
their faith, national identity and character, sovereignty, dignity and
freedom.

18. Indeed, the situation within Afghanistan and the three and half
million refugees forced into exile in neighbouring countries have given
cause for unprecedented anxiety particularly for weak and small nations of
the world. To these nations the continuance of the Afghan nationalist
struggle is crucial. It is incumbent on the international community to see
that this struggle succeed.

19. We, in Malaysia, are fully committed to the restoration of the lawful
rights of the Afghan people, including their right to determine for
themselves their future, free from coercion and for the Afghan refugees to
return to their homes in safety and honour. We support the efforts of the
United Nations Secretary General in initiating indirect talks with the
parties concerned to find a political solution consistent with the United
Nations and Islamic Conference Resolutions on the Afghan problem.

Iran-Iraq War 

20. Mr. President, it is disconcerting that the war between Iran and Iraq
continues to rage. The conflict has gone for far too long. It has taken a
heavy toll in lives lost, and properties destroyed, in wounds inflicted
and in human misery. We must all, therefore, apply ourselves earnestly to
the task of reconciling the two countries in the interest of the peoples
of these countries themselves and the world at large. The fact is that
there would be no victor, nor vanquished, in this conflict.

21. Malaysia enjoys close and cordial relations with both Iran and Iraq,
and we therefore implore them to cease fighting, accept mediation and
reconciliation so that an honourable and an enduring solution could be
found.

Apartheid 

22. My Government abhors South Africa's inhuman policy of apartheid. This
is a travesty of justice and is an affront to human dignity. Apartheid,
coupled with the Pretoria regime's deliberate and provocative armed
incursions into neighbouring states, constitute a major cause of tension
and instability, not only in Africa, but also the world at large. Malaysia
will continue to fully support the cause of the oppressed people of South
Africa in their struggle for equality, justice and dignity against
apartheid. Those who champion human rights, or claim to do so, could do
better by condemning the Pretoria regime and treating them like the freaks
that they are.

23. Another area of great concern to us is the problem of drug abuse. The
world community has for a long time treated the drug problem as a social
problem akin to poverty, slavery, abuse of children and other social
ills. In fact drug addiction is all these social ills rolled into one.

The youths afflicted with this problem are mental slaves with deviant
tendencies who are permanently impoverished.

The problem must be tackled at source and this can only be done if the
United Nations will act positively. Failure to arrest this spreading
scourge will destroy whole generations to come.

Economic Issues 

24. The age of empires and imperial powers is practically over. But the
world has not as yet become a better place for the previously
colonised. There are many reasons for this and among them is the banding
together of the rich nations in order to maintain economic dominance,
which some say is actually a form of imperialism.

25. We, in Malaysia, are very much affected by this. As a nation we have
tried to live within the rules, formal and informal, which govern the
economic relations between nations. We have even refrained from
nationalising industries set up during colonial days, which were engaged
in literally extracting wealth from our country for foreigners who
frequently do not even know where Malaysia is, much less care for the
well-being of its people.

26. But our patience and sense of fair-play is being taxed to the limit
with the market manipulations abroad which in effect reduce our people to
underpaid labourers. As a producer of primary commodities like tin, rubber
and palm oil we are as much entitled to a fair return on our outlay as any
producer of manufactured goods in the developed countries. Producing these
primary products is no longer merely a question of having enough land or
minerals and cheap labour. In these days expensive capital outlay is
needed to explore, extract and develop, and also to do the required
research and development. The indications are that these costs and the
technology required will be increasing steadily in the years to come. Thus
money is needed not only as profits but for future development for our own
income and for the needs of the world.

27. While the manufactured goods that we buy are priced according to the
cost of production and marketing and of course a hefty profit, the prices
of primary products seem to bear no relation to any of these costs. They
are priced according to the whims and fancies of a host of people who have
nothing to do with their production. The various exchanges located in the
developed countries literally manipulate prices in order to make a profit
for the brokers, the dealers, the speculators and others. These people
make money when the prices go up. They also make money when the prices go
down. As such it suits them to cause a yo-yo effect on commodity prices.

28. In addition, these exchanges are exclusive clubs where the producers
are unable to get membership. The same brokers and others who trade on the
exchanges are also the people who make the rules, apply the rules and
arbitrate.

Is it any wonder that whenever their profits are threatened they change
the rules so that they will not only be saved but make a handsome profit
as well.

29. This is the situation in the tin and rubber markets today. It has
played havoc with my country's economy. We have tried to reduce price
fluctuations by having Producer-Consumer Agreements. But this is an
arrangement that taxes the producers when prices are down but benefits the
consumers when price trends are upwards. It is a case of heads you win
tails I lose.

30. As if all these are not enough, the United States maintains a
stockpile ostensibly for strategic (meaning security) reasons. We fully
support the needs of the United States for strategic reserves but the
administration of this reserve is clearly not influenced by problems of
strategy.

The stockpile is merely a rich nation's monopolistic weapon used to
depress prices of commodities for the benefit of the consumers.

31. Such is the fate of the producers of primary commodities that they now
have to sell three to five times more of their produce in order to buy the
same amount of manufactured goods from the developed countries as they did
20 years ago. In other words the gap between rich and poor has widened by
300 to 500 percent in the last 20 years or so.

32. Malaysia is trying to break the vicious circle of the old commodity
market system. We are trying to set up a more equitable system which will
maintain reasonable prices while ensuring adequate supply of tin and
rubber to the world.

Towards this end we have tried to form a viable and effective producers
association. There is no intention to create a monopolistic situation. We
know fully well that unreasonableness on our part will result in reduced
consumption and a switch to substitutes. We hope that producer countries
everywhere will appreciate the need for this strategy and participate in
it.

33. Commodity prices today are at their lowest. We can blame the recession
for this. But what we regret is that this recession is man-made. There is
no shortage of supply, nor is there a shortage of demand. Energy is
plentiful and the level of technology is unprecedented. Yet suddenly no
one wants to buy what only yesterday they could not have enough. And those
who want to buy are without the necessary foreign exchange. Indeed many
poor countries have literally to sell their soul in order merely to
survive.

34. As I have said this world-wide depression is man-made. It is made in
the powerful countries by short-sighted people. Foremost among the
decisions that led to the diminution of world-trade is the increase of
interest rates.

The high cost of money has reduced investments, shrunk inventories and
stifled new business initiatives. Thus a lot of commodities are floating
around unsold and unbought, further depressing prices.

35. True some people have waxed rich in this depression but the price is
high in terms of unemployment, bankruptcies and misery for the poor. The
world's economy cannot go on like this for long. There will be violence,
riots and revolutions. Governments will fall and anarchy will prevail. The
longer the depression lasts the longer will it take to recover.

36. As this depression is man-made, it must be unmade by man as well. The
first need is to lower interest rates even if it causes slightly higher
inflation. Secondly, the protectionism of the rich nations must be
reduced, if not done away with. If this cannot be done, at least the
protectionist policy should be made more discriminating.

The developing nations should not be subjected to any protectionist
measures. This should at least soften the impact of the recession on
them. The rich countries too would benefit as the improved income of the
poor will enable them to buy more manufactured goods.

37. The world has suffered enough from this depression. We need action
now. We need the reversal of policies that are so obviously wrong. We
would like to appeal to those people who wield so much power to heed the
needs of the world.

Reverse the policies you have made and the world will remember you as
saviours.

United Nations Conference on the Law of the Sea (UNCLOS) and Antarctica.

38. The participating members of the United Nations must congratulate
themselves on the successful conclusion of the United Nations Conference
on the Law of the Sea. The days when the rich nations of the world can
take for themselves whatever territory and resources that they have access
to are over. Henceforth all the unclaimed wealth of this earth must be
regarded as the common heritage of all the nations of this planet.

39. The seas and the sea-beds are undoubtedly going to be the source of
wealth for the future. There is no reason why the minerals and other
resources presently found on the exposed surfaces of the planet will not
be found in the sea-beds. The problem is, of course, one of exploration
and extraction. The high cost and the sophisticated technology required
will be well beyond the capacity of the poor nations. Unless they can have
a share as of right whenever this wealth is extracted the gap between them
and the rich nations is going to widen even more. When finally they do
have the capacity much of the readily accessible wealth would have been
exhausted. It is hoped that with the agreement on the Law of the Sea the
poor nations will get their fair share.

40. But there remains certain areas in the world which are not covered by
any international agreement. According to present norms, territories
colonised by the old colonial powers must be decolonised i.e. returned to
the natives or the original inhabitants. The United Nations concern with
this issue is reflected in the Permanent Committee on
Decolonisation. However, there are still land areas which have neither
natives nor settlers. There is, therefore, no one to inherit the land and
to set up viable governments should the claims of the metropolitan powers
be given up. Because of this, little attention has been paid to these
areas.

41. It is now time that the United Nations focus it's attention on these
areas, the largest of which is the continent of Antarctica. A number of
countries have in the past sent expeditions which have not limited
themselves to mere scientific exploration but have gone on to claim huge
wedges of Antarctica for their countries. These countries are not
depriving any natives of their lands. They are therefore not required to
decolonise. But the fact still remains that these uninhabited lands do not
legally belong to the discoverers as much as the colonial territories do
not belong to the colonial powers.

42. Like the seas and the sea-beds these uninhabited lands belong to the
international community. The countries presently claiming them must give
them up so that either the United Nations administer these lands or the
present occupants act as trustees for the nations of the world.

43. Presently exploitation of the resources in the Antarctica is too
costly and the technology is not yet available. But no doubt the day will
come when Antarctica can provide the world with food and other resources
for its development. It is only right that such exploitation should
benefit the poor nations as much as the rich.

44. Now that we have reached agreement on the Law of the Sea, the United
Nations must convene a meeting in order to define the problem of
uninhabited lands, whether claimed or unclaimed, and to determine the
rights of all nations to these lands. We are aware of the Treaty of
Antarctica concluded by a few nations which provides for their cooperation
for scientific research and prohibits non-peaceful activities. While there
is some merit in this treaty, it is nevertheless an agreement between a
select group of countries and does not reflect the true feelings of
members of the United Nations or their just claims. A new international
agreement is required so that historical episodes are not made into facts
to substantiate claims.

Conclusion 

45. As I have said at the beginning, the world today is beset by crises of
various kinds. To believe otherwise would be to ignore the realities
before us. It is imperative that we take cognizance of this fact and
mobilise all our efforts to overcome these crises. We can do this if we
choose to, or we can let the opportunity slip by. Never before has human
ingenuity in science and technology reached such a level of development as
today. But we must use it wisely, not in pursuit of sophisticated weaponry
for purposes of war but instead to harness it towards peaceful and
beneficial uses for the common good.

46. It is an imperilled world in which we are living and we must put it
right at all cost. This could come about if nations would be willing to
effectively implement past and future resolutions of this Organisation and
its related agencies. For this would not only help restore the
international community's confidence in the United Nations but also
contribute to the resolution of the current conflicts and crises. I urge
all members of this Organisation to give their fullest cooperation and
every support towards this end so that international peace, stability and
security would be achieved.

Thank you.

Prime Minister's Office, 
Kuala Lumpur.

 



 


 











 
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