Bolivia: Change
the capitalist system
President
of Bolivia Evo Morales: If there is no agreement at this
level, why not tell the people?
Rie Jerichow - 18/12/2009 - Evo Morales, the President of
Bolivia, took the floor to express annoyance at the way
a climate deal is being thrashed out by a small group of
world leaders at the last minute.
"If
there is no agreement at this level, why not tell it to
the people?" he said from the podium at the plenary
meeting in Copenhagen.
"The
time has come for everyone. We can't spend days and days
here. We have other important issues to deal with,"
he said, calling for further consultations with the people.
"Who
is responsible?" he asked. And concluded "The
responsibility lies on the capitalist system - we have to
change the capitalist system."
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Chávez
felt excludedVenezuela’s
President
Hugo Chávez criticized the UN climate conference
for “a real lack of transparency”, speaking
on behalf of the Bolivarian Alliance for the Americas.
Marianne Bom - 18/12/2009 - President Hugo Chávez
of Venezuela took the floor at the plenary, Friday afternoon,
and accused US President Barack Obama of behaving like an
emperor “who comes in during the middle of the night
… and cooks up a document that we will not accept,
we will never accept”.
Chávez
underlined that “all countries are equal”. He
stressed that he would not accept that some countries prepared
a text for a climate deal and just “slipped [it] under
the door” to be signed by the others. He said he had
heard of the existence of such a text, but “we don’t
know the paper” and then continued by accusing the
conference of “a real lack of transparency”.
Hugo
Chávez suggested he would leave the UN climate conference
in protest of the way it developed.
“We
can’t wait any longer, we are leaving … We are
leaving, knowing that it wasn’t possible getting a
deal,” he said.
The
Venezuelan President spoke on behalf of the Bolivarian Alliance
for the Americas, an alliance of among others Ecuador, Cuba,
Nicaragua and Bolivia.
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South
Korea: Copenhagen marks a new beginning
President
Lee Myung-bak introduces a new institute to assist governments
worldwide in formulating national action plans for clean
energy. - Morten Andersen - 18/12/2009 - South Korea will
attract ”the best minds from all around the world”
to work at a new Global Green Growth Institute. The institute's
prime task will be to assist governments in drawing up national
plans for green growth.
”We
only have a few hours left till the Copenhagen conference
closes. However, this is not an end but rather a new beginning.
We have not reached agreement on all issues, but this should
not be an excuse for no action. There is no alternative
to our planet, this is all we have,” President Lee
Myung-bak said as he adressed the conference's plenary Friday
afternoon.
The
president expressed his hope that the idea of green growth
will be a ”beacon” for other nations and make
a ”dramatic” change to their paths of economic
development.
South
Korea recently announced that it will cut its greenhouse
gas emissions by four percent by 2020 compared to 2005 levels.
This makes the country the first emerging economy to take
on an absolute reduction commitment and not only a relative
commitment compared to a business-as-usual scenario.
Da UNFCCC