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Iran blames West for global crisis

DOHA
Sat Nov 29, 2008 6:49am EST
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad speaks while attending the opening of the first Asian Mayors Forum in Tehran November 19, 2008. REUTERS/Morteza Nikoubazl

DOHA (Reuters) - Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad blamed the West for the global financial crisis on Saturday, saying other countries were being dragged in to help resolve Western problems.

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"Leaders of the Western bloc ... are trying to extend their own crisis to the rest of the globe to portray it as global," Ahmadinejad told a U.N. aid conference in the Qatar's capital Doha.

"They dispatch different delegations to other countries and hold regional meetings and conferences in order to force other governments to get involved in this crisis to cover a part of their loss."

The credit crunch has frozen lending markets, forced trillions in government bailouts and sent a raft of nations into recession with many others hovering on the cusp of a severe economic downturn. The crisis has taken a heavy toll on poorer nations through trade and an inability to access credit markets.

According to World Bank estimates, 40 million people will be dragged into poverty in 2009 as a result of the global financial crisis and related economic meltdown.

The Iranian president, who often rails against the West, said the capitalist era had come to an end and said the world should adopt a new system based on "religious, spiritual and non-usury" principles.

"The capitalist bloc imposes its standards unilaterally on others," he said. "While it prices its goods by itself, it determines the prices for the commodities of other nations to secure its own interests by using deceptive economic ploys.

"The situation of the oil market and the commodities market come into play.

Iran faces U.N. and Western sanctions over its disputed atomic ambitions. The country does not recognize Israel and its hardline president has often predicted the imminent demise of the Jewish state.

Ahmadinejad reiterated his views on the Jewish state on Saturday, and condemned Israel's blockade of the Gaza Strip, which is controlled by the Palestinian militant Islamic group Hamas.

The U.N. aid meeting runs until December 2 and is unrelated to the World Trade Organization's Doha round.

Officials hope the conference will harden up general commitments by donors in Monterrey, Mexico, in 2002. The meeting was to have marked a big step toward goals of reducing extreme poverty but has been overshadowed by the global financial crisis.



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