LONDON: Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Wednesday a new era was sweeping the Middle East and it was up to its leaders to embrace change or risk being cast away. He dismissed allegations by many Arab autocrats that an unprecedented wave of uprisings that toppled leaders in Tunisia and Egypt and inspired masses across Libya, Yemen, Bahrain and Syria was the work of “foreign elements”.

Davutoglu said the Middle East was passing through a political and social upheaval like that which gripped Eastern Europe in the 1990s and toppled a series of communist dictators.

“In the region there is an era of change,” Davutoglu said in an interview. “It is like Eastern Europe in the late 1990s. Once there is a popular demand in a region, each country is being affected by these demands.”

The world, he said, was changing and a young generation of Arabs “wanted more dignity, more economic prosperity and more democracy”.

“Now wise leaders in the region should lead this process rather than try to prevent it. Those who try to prevent this process will face more difficulties like in Libya.”

“This a new era that will bring many challenges, many opportunities and many risks.”

“It is up to these leaders to maximise the opportunities and minimise these risks,” he added.

Davutoglu was speaking a day after an international coalition in London piled pressure on Libyan leader Muammar Qadhafi to quit, resolving to continue military action against his forces until he complies with a UN resolution.

Many young Arabs look to Turkey as an example of a Muslim country making democracy work within a secular framework, thanks to far reaching reforms undertaken in the last eight years by a ruling party that emerged from Islamist parties a decade ago.

DOUBTS FOREIGN PLOTS: Asked about accusations by Syria that “foreign elements” had stirred two weeks of anti-government protests, Davutoglu said:

“We don’t have any evidence. In Tunisia, Egypt, Libya, Syria, Bahrain and Yemen, in all these countries, it was a genuine start.”

He said Mohamed Bouazizi, the Tunisian vegetable seller who set himself alight in protest after a policewoman slapped and hurled insults at him was “an ordinary Tunisian”.

“If we think all these issues are led by foreign elements then it means we think that Arab individuals and societies cannot demand change or do something alike.”

“Ordinary Arabs, young Arabs, men and women, want to have more dignity, more freedom, more participation in politics. I think the demand for change is genuine.”

“We should understand those voices in Tahrir square, in Tunisia and elsewhere. Then we can prepare for the future.”

Davutoglu made his comments just before Syrian President Bashar al-Assad told parliament in his first speech since protests erupted that they were the result of a “foreign plot”.—Reuters

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