UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan welcomed more than 100 heads of state to the World Summit yesterday with a plea for all nations to work together to uplift the poor and rescue the environment.
"Let us not be deceived when we look at a clear blue sky into thinking that all is well. All is not well," Annan said.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Conjuring up the "cries for help of those 13 million souls" in southern Africa facing starvation, Annan told the leaders that failure to take decisive action would have too high a cost.
"Let us stop being economically defensive and start being politically courageous," he said.
The summit aims to forge a plan to turn promises made at the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, into reality.
"Poverty and environmental degradation, if unchecked, spell catastrophe for our world. That is clear," British Prime Minister Tony Blair said.
However, more than a week of negotiations on an action plan has been excruciating.
Bleary-eyed negotiators were upbeat after compromises were reached overnight in three key areas: climate change, trade and sanitation. But a European push for targets on increasing the use of wind and solar energy faced stiff resistance from some developing nations and the US.
The US is a leader in renewable energy technology but feels an "arbitrary target" is less important than cleaner use of all energy sources, said US Assistant Secretary of State John Turner. "We want it to be more comprehensive and look at energy security."
South African Environment Minister Valli Moosa said targets for renewable energy were a rich country's luxury. "We will not support binding targets for renewable energies for developing countries," he said.
Diplomats said one contentious issue was resolved late Saturday when negotiators settled on wording about the Kyoto Protocol on climate change, which the US has refused to sign. The agreed text says nations that have ratified Kyoto "strongly urge" states that have not done so to ratify it in "a timely manner."
Kyoto got another boost yesterday when Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien, who had been wavering, confirmed he would submit it to parliament by the end of the year. But the accord cannot go into effect unless Russia signs, too.
Negotiators also reached compromises on trade that largely stick to language agreed last year at a WTO meeting in Doha, Qatar.
They include renewed commitments to negotiate on phasing out agricultural and other trade-distorting subsidies. They go beyond that in one area: urging countries to reform subsidies that are environmentally harmful, such as those for the fishing industry.
The last outstanding trade issue was resolved late Sunday when negotiators agreed to delete language giving the WTO precedence over multilateral environment agreements, diplomats said.
Early yesterday, negotiators added a commitment to halve the number of people living without sanitation -- now 2 billion -- by 2015, diplomats said.
However, civic and environmental groups condemned the compromises made at the summit, calling some of them a significant step backward from previous commitments.
Though everyone from King Mswati III of Swaziland to German Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder was here yesterday, many were disappointed US President George W. Bush had opted not to come. US Secretary of State Colin Powell was expected to arrive in his place tomorrow.
Several speakers slyly criticized the US with general appeals for all countries to ratify Kyoto.
"We know that if climate change is not stopped, all parts of the world will suffer. Some will even be destroyed," Blair said.
See story:
Taipei takes new diplomatic tack
A Chinese aircraft carrier group entered Japan’s economic waters over the weekend, before exiting to conduct drills involving fighter jets, the Japanese Ministry of Defense said yesterday. The Liaoning aircraft carrier, two missile destroyers and one fast combat supply ship sailed about 300km southwest of Japan’s easternmost island of Minamitori on Saturday, a ministry statement said. It was the first time a Chinese aircraft carrier had entered that part of Japan’s exclusive economic zone (EEZ), a ministry spokesman said. “We think the Chinese military is trying to improve its operational capability and ability to conduct operations in distant areas,” the spokesman said. China’s growing
BUILDUP: US General Dan Caine said Chinese military maneuvers are not routine exercises, but instead are ‘rehearsals for a forced unification’ with Taiwan China poses an increasingly aggressive threat to the US and deterring Beijing is the Pentagon’s top regional priority amid its rapid military buildup and invasion drills near Taiwan, US Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth said on Tuesday. “Our pacing threat is communist China,” Hegseth told the US House of Representatives Appropriations Subcommittee on Defense during an oversight hearing with US General Dan Caine, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. “Beijing is preparing for war in the Indo-Pacific as part of its broader strategy to dominate that region and then the world,” Hegseth said, adding that if it succeeds, it could derail
COMPLIANCE: The SEF has helped more than 3,900 Chinese verify documents, indicating that most of those affected are willing to cooperate, the MAC said More than 3,100 spouses from China have submitted proof of renunciation of their Chinese household registration, the Mainland Affairs Council (MAC) said yesterday. The National Immigration Agency has since April issued notices to spouses to submit proof that they had renounced their Chinese household registration on or before June 30 or their Taiwanese household registration would be revoked. People having difficulties obtaining such a document can request an extension of the deadline or submit a written affidavit in lieu of it. The council said it would hold a briefing at 2:30pm on Friday at the immigration agency’s Taichung office in cooperation with the
The government-funded human papillomavirus (HPV) vaccination is to be expanded to boys at junior-high school starting in September, the Health Promotion Administration (HPA) said yesterday. The Taiwan Society of Otorhinolaryngology, Head and Neck Surgery, the Taiwan Association of Obstetrics and Gynecology, the Taiwan Immunization Vision and Strategy, the Infectious Diseases Society of Taiwan, the Taiwan Head and Neck Society, the Formosa Cancer Foundation and the National Alliance of Presidents of Parents Associations held a joint news conference in Taipei yesterday to raise public awareness about the risks of HPV infection, regardless of gender. Invited to give an address, HPA Director-General Wu Chao-chun