The statement rejects talk of special conditions or needs and does not mention the occupation of Iraq or Palestine.
His statement also rejected the concept of exclusive representation.
The statement deplored anti-Semitism and rejected the idea that the Jews could be blamed for the death of Jesus.
The statement defends the government's right to regulate abortion but rejects a total prohibition, especially for the three cases specified.
The statement said the sisters had met with I.R.A. representatives and rejected the offer to execute their brother's killers.
The statement rejected what it called American threats to resort to force to free the hostages.
The same statement includes a call for all parties to refrain from unilateral steps and reject any form of violence.
The statement rejected the American demand for a "complete, verifiable, irreversible dismantling" of the country's nuclear programs.
The statement rejected the American formula point by point.
The statement also rejected the notion of Chadian mercenaries fighting in the Libyan civil war.