Thursday, July 09, 2009


G8 summit: cooling down the planet

09 July, 2009, 17:55

On day two of the G8 summit, global warming takes center stage. The eight richest nations scratch their heads as to where the money’s gone this past year, and developing countries line up to ask for their share.



The G8 summit in L’Aquila, Italy, which has entered its second day on Thursday, is joined by the “Group of Five” – the leaders of China, India, Brazil, the Republic of South Africa and Mexico – and Egypt as well.

On Thursday G8 summit leaders have unanimously approved the US-Russia arms reduction deal due to be signed by the year’s end, said Russia’s foreign ministry.

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Meanwhile, Oxfam International has declared climate change as the number one threat to humanity, so the issue is very much pressing on the world leaders now, possibly more than ever. According to several NGOs and activists, there are fears that, due to the severity of the financial crisis, the fight against climate change could potentially be put on the backburner.

The group has already decided in a significant acknowledgement on Wednesday that the average global temperature should not increase by more than 2 degrees Celsius.

Concerns have been voiced over how relevant the G8 is in contemporary society. However, a spokesperson for the Russian President has answered the claims:

“Of course there are questions about how the G8 could be more efficient to achieve common goals. Last night’s discussions of the world leaders about pressing issues has shown that the G8 is still effective. But of course some issues, such as global warming are impossible to discuss without developing countries like China and Brazil. So, the G8 will undergo some changes which are being discussed at this summit,” Dmintry Medvedev’s spokesperson, Natalya Timakova, told RT.

Southern Kurils standoff

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev met with Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso on the sidelines of the G8 summit. The two countries have an ongoing territorial dispute concerning the southern Kuril Islands in Russia’s Far East.

Kazuo Kodama, a spokesman from the Japanese foreign ministry told RT that the discussion between the two top officials was very candid and open. According to him, the president and the prime minister have expressed an eager desire to work together, especially in terms of security and North Korea.

There was progress made in the long-running territorial dispute and the two sides agreed to work further.

“We share a view that in order to truly elevate Japanese-Russian strategic partnership relations onto a higher dimension it is very unnatural that we are unable to resolve this long-lasting issue of the Northern Territories,” commented Kazuo Kodama.

However, Medvedev condemned a bill adopted by Japan’s parliament, which officially recognizes the Islands as part of its “historical territory”. The Russian President stressed the move was not a foundation for sincere dialogue.

Russian Independent analyst Vladimir Kozin says the Kuril Islands are of great value to Japan:

“They would like to reconsider international law and international treaties. They would like to get these islands because of huge energy resources. They could be used for agricultural resources, for fishing. It is also a strategic area for Russian nuclear powered submarines,” he explained.

Nuclear worries: G8 on Iran and North Korea

The G8 has once again unanimously confirmed that they will strive for a comprehensive, peaceful, and diplomatic settlement of the Iranian nuclear issue.

In addition, the eight leaders have denounced the nuclear tests staged by North Korea in May and its subsequent series of missile launches. The final statement on non-proliferation, adopted at the summit, calls on the country to return to the Six-Party Talks immediately and without any preliminary conditions.

The world leaders’ concern over the fact that terrorists may get their hands on weapons of mass destruction has also been mentioned in the document signed. The G8 stated they are waiting for the examination of an initiative put forth earlier by US President Barack Obama, which is aimed at ensuring the security of all vulnerable nuclear materials in the world.

The G8 summit has unanimously welcomed the Russia-US agreement to sign a new nuclear arms reduction treaty by the end of 2009.

Meanwhile, a summit on global nuclear security is planned to be held in Washington, March 2010, Obama said.








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