Climate Change
Summit about to close without agreement
COPENHAGEN, December 17.— The UN Summit on
Climate Change, which ends today in Copenhagen, had
not reached any concrete agreements as of last
night, but it did feature countless appeals by
political leaders to find a consensus before it is
too late.
The
race against the clock was evident in the halls of
the Bella Center, the conference venue, with
participants trying to achieve a minimum of
consensus, if not the legally binding agreement
desired by the majority of the 192 countries
participating, EFE reports.
Meanwhile, members of Danish social movements and
other international organizations gathered at the
Valby Hallen Stadium in this city on Thursday to
hear Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, who opened
his speech saying, "Long live the young people, the
volcano of socialism, the volcano of the peoples!"
Chávez noted that it was the anniversary of the
death of the liberator of Venezuela, Simón Bolívar,
and affirmed that he continues to be an example for
the youth of Our America and of the world. "You all
know that today is December 17. I would like to
honor a timeless revolutionary, a timeless youth,
our father," he said.
The rally was attended by Cuban Vice President
Esteban Lazo, who also spoke during the summit’s
plenary session; Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Samuel
Santos; and other members of the ALBA bloc,
according to YVKE Mundial news.
For his part, Bolivian President Evo Morales, who
also spoke during the conference plenary, announced
that a popular referendum is underway, and has been
proposed for the entire world, to find out whether
the world’s citizens would support or reject ideas
for saving "Pachamama" (Mother Earth).
In a speech that was greeted with applause on
several occasions, Morales affirmed that even if the
governments of the rich nations rejected such a
referendum, the peoples represented in the
organizations and demonstrations in Denmark had
already expressed, with their protests, their
initial approval of the initiative.
In his speech, Ecuadorian Foreign Minister Fander
Falconí emphasized the importance of all countries
accepting their moral and ethical responsibility to
the planet. He described the underdeveloped nations
as "passive smokers," and stated that the developed
countries were historically responsible for the
climate debt that we now have with Mother Earth.
(SE)