Muslim nations are "laughing" at European efforts to grapple with a debilitating debt crisis in Greece, which has serious ramifications for the world's biggest open mmarket, the head of the World Islamic Economic Forum has said.
Former Malaysian deputy prime minister Tun Musa Hitam spoke to AFP in Brussels as European Union plans for a backstop bailout enabling Athens to refinance tens of billions of euros of debt repayments and budget commitments were being thrashed out among eurozone officials.
"Seen from the east, from developing countries, we're laughing because they're not doing what they taught us," Tun Musa said of the EU's decision to protect Greece rather than sending Athens to the International Monetary Fund.
"You find that a European nation has adopted anything but good practice, which has resulted in a disaster (and) now the name and the prestige of the European Union is at stake, but more importantly, its economies," he added.
"The normal way of resolving these issues is to go to the IMF. Developing countries do that, but not the EU. "It's yes, no, maybe every day," he said. Tun Musa was speaking before eurozone finance ministers agreed last Sunday to pump some 30 billion euros (41 billion dollars) into Greece's coffers this year if necessary - at below-market rates of around five percent interest.
And within no time, new nation-wide strikes had pushed Greek borrowing rates back through the pain barrier. With parallel EU negotiations with the IMF under way on its involvement, and 15 billion euros of loans anticipated in 2010 from Washington, Tun Musa maintained that the Western system where "anything goes in terms of lending and conduct" lay behind the Greek fiscal disaster.
The missing ingredients of "responsibility, transparency and accountability," glaringly absent throughout fraudulent Greek reporting to the EU, were instead to be found in Islamic finance, he argued.
"The methodology of Islamic banking will become more acceptable, even without being in Islam," he said. He cited a surge in the numbers of specialist economic religious ulama, who re-interpret Sharia law for expansion throughout non-Islamic territories. Sharia prohibits interest on money and re-distributes added value based on goods not paper.
Ironically, Moody's Investors Service said earlier this month that the Islamic finance industry had a market potential of at least 5.0 trillion dollars - more than five times its actual 2009 value. A host of countries, led by Britain but stretching from Italy to Japan and Russia, are planning joint Islamic finance ventures, seen as filling a perceived vacuum in confidence.
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