Let me, as a practitioner, give one real example. When they were discussing the constitution, we were asking them to bring some experts from other countries who have huge experience about that, and we were trying to explain that it is protection for everybody, majorities as well minorities. When we developed the idea of....
I remember some of the talks that I got in Iraq on equal citizenship. They said, “We are not like the west.” I said, “Well, India.” It happened once that India had a prime minister from a minority Muslim and the president was from another minority, was a Sikh. But nobody was saying that they were not Indians. So if it's working there, why isn't it working in the Middle East?
I do strongly believe that, if we don't put that in the constitution and work on it, there is no way of just trying to have some other solution. What I don't agree with in general, especially the west, is that it's much more in the position of reacting than acting. We saw it everywhere. Now we're hearing about beheaded westerners. You know, the same day they beheaded a westerner, ISIL killed more than 1,000 Muslims, and mainly Sunnis from their own communities that they are pretending to develop.
So if we don't go deeply into all these issues and help them with the institutions, then it's just not going to work.