日批在线视频_内射毛片内射国产夫妻_亚洲三级小视频_在线观看亚洲大片短视频_女性向h片资源在线观看_亚洲最大网

  .contact us |.about us
Home BizChina Newsphoto Cartoon LanguageTips Metrolife DragonKids SMS Edu
news... ...
             Focus on... ...
   

World Summit opens with call to action
( 2002-08-27 09:51 ) (7 )

Two delegates to the World Summit on Sustainable Development walk in front of a giant globe in Sandton Square, adjacent to the Sandton Convention Centre in Johannesburg, South Africa, Monday Aug. 26, 2002. [AP]

Aiming for its largest gathering ever, the United Nations opened a global summit Monday to seek ways of protecting nature while boosting living standards for the world's poorest people.

In the opening speech, South African President Thabo Mbeki said the world has an urgent obligation to narrow the divide between the rich and the poor.

"For the first time in human history, human society possesses the capacity, the knowledge and the resources to eradicate poverty and underdevelopment," he said.

There were a wide range of issues on the agenda - and as many arguments.

Officials from the United States and the European Union were at odds over the usefulness of targets and timetables for issues like sanitation. The EU considers setting specific goals central to the summit's agenda, while U.S. officials say launching projects is more important than documents.

The atmosphere continues to be choked by pollution, a victim of rampant consumerism and the churn of industry as well as desperately poor people draining their lands of water, topsoil and wildlife just to stay alive.

"A global human society based on poverty for many and prosperity for a few, characterized by islands of wealth, surrounded by a sea of poverty, is unsustainable," Mbeki told delegates at the opening session of the World Summit on Sustainable Development.

Some 12,600 delegates - including government officials, journalists and members of non-governmental organizations - had already showed up by Monday. About 50,000 people were expected to participate by the time the conference ends, making it the largest in U.N. history.

About 20 miles away, a more colorful, but less organized, gathering of activists called the Global Peoples' Forum struggled to gain momentum.

Delegates there sang and danced, waved placards and meditated, while campaigning for everything from better access to clean water to world peace. One sculptor fashioned penguins from ice with a chain saw, leaving them to melt in the sun to represent global warming.

However, the announced keynote speaker, former South African President Nelson Mandela, did not show up. His office said the organizers never invited him.

The government summit is being held in Sandton, Africa's swankiest commercial district of palatial marble-and-glass towers looming over the squalid township of Alexandra, where many people live in the very hopeless conditions the summit seeks to erase.

The summit, being held in a convention center attached to a shopping mall and business complex, was sealed off by concrete barriers and metal fences. An 8,000-person security force is deployed to help prevent the kind of violence seen in past years' international meetings in Seattle and Genoa, Italy.

In the event's first protests, Zimbabwean and Ethiopian opposition activists peacefully demonstrated Monday against their governments.

Organizers expect the biggest protest to take place Saturday, when about 400 groups plan to march from Alexandra to the conference center.

More than 100 heads of state arrive for the summit next week. Many environmental activists have criticized President Bush for not attending. The official list of participating world leaders was not complete, but among top leaders expected were Britain's Tony Blair and Germany's Gerhard Schroeder. Like Bush, Russia's Vladimir Putin is not attending.

By the time the leaders arrive, negotiators hope to have hammered out detailed timetables for tackling problems of energy, biodiversity, food security, clean water and health care.

Unlike the 1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro, which opened with two minutes of silence for a "dying" planet, delegates here immediately delved into pragmatic assessments of the world's most pressing needs.

"We must have this sense of urgency that we have no time to lose," summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai said.

Developing nations are trying to extract more aid and greater access to Western markets and technology from the summit. The United States is resisting any new aid targets or timetables, while demanding that aid recipients reduce corruption.

Pre-summit talks disintegrated into fingerpointing, and delegates continued to rewrite the summit's action plans to patch over differences.

Even the EU is at odds with the United States, agreeable to binding targets in some areas such as sanitation. According to the United Nations, 2.2 million people in the developing world die each year from diseases associated with lack of safe water and inadequate sanitation.

"Targets with timetables are at the core of our agenda," said EU official Christine Day. "They alone will make the international community accountable for delivering on its promises."

The U.S. delegation has played down the importance of the summit's final documents, saying they were secondary to the potential to launch "results-oriented" projects.

The United States is seeking business partnerships to augment a $5 billion foreign aid package for some of the summit's key issues. An announcement is expected by the weekend, officials said.

Many environmental activists were disheartened by the United States' continuing resistance to setting firm timetables for action.

"Every time targets come up, the U.S. puts a line through it," said Gordon Shepherd, an official with the World Wildlife Fund.

 
   
 
   

 

         
         
       
        .contact us |.about us
  Copyright By chinadaily.com.cn. All rights reserved  
主站蜘蛛池模板: 色综合久久88 | 久久aⅴ乱码一区二区三区 婷婷六月丁 | 一级看片免费视频 | 午夜爽爽爽男女免费观看 | 免费看一级黄色大片 | 亚洲免费中文字幕 | 少妇喷水在线观看 | 国产91精品一区二区绿帽 | 中文字幕在线播放一区 | 欧美国产一级片 | 三毛片| 91pron在线| 亚洲欧洲色图 | 福利网址在线 | 日本成人综合 | 一区二区三区国产视频 | 亚洲一二三四在线 | www在线视频 | 天堂视频网 | 最新国产在线视频 | 黄色日韩 | 91视频第一页 | 91香蕉在线看 | 午夜在线观看免费视频 | 在线免费观看亚洲 | 18岁成人在线观看 | 99在线视频精品 | 天天综合网入口 | 狠狠操91 | 99热成人 | 精品1区2区 | 精品少妇一区二区三区免费观看 | 毛片网站视频 | 亚洲 欧美 综合 | 国产黄色网 | 9.1片黄在线观看 | 久草视频在线免费看 | 色国产在线 | 日韩欧美中| 亚洲综合视频一区 | 国产精品麻豆入口 |