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Muslim nations consider gold, barter trade to beat sanctions

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Muslim nations consider gold, barter trade to beat sanctions
By Reuters
Published: December 21, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2122554-kualalumpursummit-1576931347-382-640x480.jpg

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin among other leaders pose for photograph during Malaysia Summit. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

KUALA LUMPUR: Iran, Malaysia, Turkey and Qatar are considering trading among themselves in gold and through a barter system as a hedge against any future economic sanctions on them, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Saturday.

At the end of an Islamic summit in Malaysia, Mahathir praised Iran and Qatar for withstanding economic embargoes and said it was important for the Muslim world to be self-reliant to face future threats.

“With the world witnessing nations making unilateral decisions to impose such punitive measures, Malaysia and other nations must always bear in mind that it can be imposed on any of us,” Mahathir said.
US-allied Arab states Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut diplomatic and trade links with Qatar about 2-1/2-years ago over allegations it backs terrorism, a charge Doha denies. Iran, meanwhile, has been hit badly after the United States reimposed sanctions on it last year.

Malaysia defends Muslim summit shunned by Saudi, slammed by OIC

“I have suggested that we re-visit the idea of trading using the gold dinar and barter trade among us,” Mahathir said, referring to the Islamic medieval gold coin.

“We are seriously looking into this and we hope that we will be able to find a mechanism to put it into effect.”

The leaders agreed they needed do more business among themselves and trade in each other’s currencies.

The summit, which was snubbed by Saudi Arabia, was criticized for undermining the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which represents 57 Muslim-majority nations. Malaysia said all the OIC members had been invited to the Kuala Lumpur summit but only about 20 showed up.

By the fourth and final day of the summit, no joint statement had been released. The summit had been expected to discuss major issues affecting Muslims, including Palestine and Kashmir dispute.

Without naming any country, Mahathir said there was concern that Muslims in non-Muslim countries were forced to undergo assimilation.

“We support integration but assimilation to the extent of shedding our religion is unacceptable,” he said.

He called India’s new citizenship act unfortunate. The act facilitates for faster naturalisation of non-Muslims from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who had settled in India prior to 2015.
 
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Muslim nations consider gold, barter trade to beat sanctions
By Reuters
Published: December 21, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2122554-kualalumpursummit-1576931347-382-640x480.jpg

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin among other leaders pose for photograph during Malaysia Summit. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

KUALA LUMPUR: Iran, Malaysia, Turkey and Qatar are considering trading among themselves in gold and through a barter system as a hedge against any future economic sanctions on them, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Saturday.

At the end of an Islamic summit in Malaysia, Mahathir praised Iran and Qatar for withstanding economic embargoes and said it was important for the Muslim world to be self-reliant to face future threats.

“With the world witnessing nations making unilateral decisions to impose such punitive measures, Malaysia and other nations must always bear in mind that it can be imposed on any of us,” Mahathir said.
US-allied Arab states Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut diplomatic and trade links with Qatar about 2-1/2-years ago over allegations it backs terrorism, a charge Doha denies. Iran, meanwhile, has been hit badly after the United States reimposed sanctions on it last year.

Malaysia defends Muslim summit shunned by Saudi, slammed by OIC

“I have suggested that we re-visit the idea of trading using the gold dinar and barter trade among us,” Mahathir said, referring to the Islamic medieval gold coin.

“We are seriously looking into this and we hope that we will be able to find a mechanism to put it into effect.”

The leaders agreed they needed do more business among themselves and trade in each other’s currencies.

The summit, which was snubbed by Saudi Arabia, was criticized for undermining the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which represents 57 Muslim-majority nations. Malaysia said all the OIC members had been invited to the Kuala Lumpur summit but only about 20 showed up.

By the fourth and final day of the summit, no joint statement had been released. The summit had been expected to discuss major issues affecting Muslims, including Palestine and Kashmir dispute.

Without naming any country, Mahathir said there was concern that Muslims in non-Muslim countries were forced to undergo assimilation.

“We support integration but assimilation to the extent of shedding our religion is unacceptable,” he said.

He called India’s new citizenship act unfortunate. The act facilitates for faster naturalisation of non-Muslims from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who had settled in India prior to 2015.
Looks like Mahatir wants to go with a bang.
 
. . . .
Leaders at the front proposing it should get well prepared . Heard first Sadam and years later Gadaffi was going to make gold the default currency and look what happened to them . They all should band together color revolutions ahead if they are really serious .
 
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Leaders at the front proposing it should get well prepared . Heard first Sadam and years later Gadaffi was going to make gold the default currency and look what happened to them . They all should band together color revolutions ahead if they are really serious .

Color revolution failed in Turkey.
 
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Muslim nations consider gold, barter trade to beat sanctions
By Reuters
Published: December 21, 2019
TWEET EMAIL
2122554-kualalumpursummit-1576931347-382-640x480.jpg

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, Qatar's Emir Sheikh Tamim bin among other leaders pose for photograph during Malaysia Summit. PHOTO: REUTERS/FILE

KUALA LUMPUR: Iran, Malaysia, Turkey and Qatar are considering trading among themselves in gold and through a barter system as a hedge against any future economic sanctions on them, Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said on Saturday.

At the end of an Islamic summit in Malaysia, Mahathir praised Iran and Qatar for withstanding economic embargoes and said it was important for the Muslim world to be self-reliant to face future threats.

“With the world witnessing nations making unilateral decisions to impose such punitive measures, Malaysia and other nations must always bear in mind that it can be imposed on any of us,” Mahathir said.
US-allied Arab states Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates, Bahrain and Egypt cut diplomatic and trade links with Qatar about 2-1/2-years ago over allegations it backs terrorism, a charge Doha denies. Iran, meanwhile, has been hit badly after the United States reimposed sanctions on it last year.

Malaysia defends Muslim summit shunned by Saudi, slammed by OIC

“I have suggested that we re-visit the idea of trading using the gold dinar and barter trade among us,” Mahathir said, referring to the Islamic medieval gold coin.

“We are seriously looking into this and we hope that we will be able to find a mechanism to put it into effect.”

The leaders agreed they needed do more business among themselves and trade in each other’s currencies.

The summit, which was snubbed by Saudi Arabia, was criticized for undermining the Saudi-based Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC), which represents 57 Muslim-majority nations. Malaysia said all the OIC members had been invited to the Kuala Lumpur summit but only about 20 showed up.

By the fourth and final day of the summit, no joint statement had been released. The summit had been expected to discuss major issues affecting Muslims, including Palestine and Kashmir dispute.

Without naming any country, Mahathir said there was concern that Muslims in non-Muslim countries were forced to undergo assimilation.

“We support integration but assimilation to the extent of shedding our religion is unacceptable,” he said.

He called India’s new citizenship act unfortunate. The act facilitates for faster naturalisation of non-Muslims from Afghanistan, Bangladesh and Pakistan who had settled in India prior to 2015.

But international gold prices are still in the hands of Great Britain.

But still, I believe, phari tu Europe ki aisi jasakti hai keh silwa nahi pain yeh, but we need an expert for that.
 
. . .
Color revolution failed in Turkey.

fortunately but look at ukrain,venezuela,bolivia etc etc(not gold related but did not dance on US tunes) These leaders should be prepared or go slowly towards there goal instead of rushing in ( be wise and sneaky ) Fiat current loving banksters dont like tangible money backed by actual gold they are very ruthless
 
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Leaders at the front proposing it should get well prepared . Heard first Sadam and years later Gadaffi was going to make gold the default currency and look what happened to them . They all should band together color revolutions ahead if they are really serious .

Gaddafi and Saddam proposed this but Muslims nation backed out and left them to stand on their own and look what happen to them. These leaders need to learn from history and make a military and economy Block and then talk about these issues.

Something like SCO and do alliance on Security, Defence, Economy and make this alliance strong so that it doesn't just collapse after a small threat.
Then it is time for a one bank, one currency etc.
 
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Problem is USA applies sanction and the whole world has to cease trading with that country. Sadly they pick off one country at a time. And yes it can be anyone any time
 
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