Kuwaiti Foreign Minister Sheikh Sabah al-Khaled al-Sabah and Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) Secretary-General Iyad Madani attend the 42nd Session of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the OIC at the Bayan Palace in Kuwait City.

AFP/Kuwait City


A conference of Muslim states yesterday condemned main militants groups in Syria and Iraq and studied a plan for developing an effective strategy against “terrorism and extremism”.
“We condemn the gruesome atrocities committed by all terrorist organisations including Daesh (Arabic for the Islamic State group), Al Qaeda and Al Nusra Front (its affiliate in Syria),” said the final communique of a two-day conference by the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC).
The Sunni groups named are involved in armed conflicts in several Arab countries including Syria, Iraq, Libya, Egypt and Yemen. No Shia groups, such as Lebanon’s Hezbollah, were mentioned in the communique.
“The escalation of violence and terrorist crimes threatens regional and international security,” the statement said.
The conference was attended by more than 50 Muslim countries at foreign ministers level, including heavyweights Turkey, Iran, Egypt and Saudi Arabia.
It called for “joining regional and international efforts to fight terrorism and extremist thought”.
Delegates discussed strategy and stressed the need “for drying up the sources of funding of terrorism”.
OIC secretary general Iyad Madani, a Saudi, admitted without elaborating that there were “differences between member states” on strategy despite “general agreement”.
Madani told reporters the meeting also focused on tackling “sectarian fighting, which is the biggest danger to Muslim countries”.
Sunni powerhouse Saudi Arabia was itself the scene of a suicide bombing last week by Sunni extremists targeting a Shia mosque and killing 21 people.
The OIC also declared support for Yemen’s UN-backed President
Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi and welcomed a Saudi-led operation against Iran-backed rebels there that has been strongly condemned by Tehran.
The conference urged rival factions in Libya to resolve their dispute peacefully, and backed Iraq’s government in its fight against IS.


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