JOHANNESBURG,
Sept 3 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - Negotiators at the Earth
Summit on Johannesburg were struggling to settle a final point in a
charter on the future of the planet Tuesday night, September 3, 2002, as
the final day loomed.
The
sticking point was an indirect reference to access to contraception and
abortion in the 71-page draft Plan of Implementation, reported Agence
France-Presse (AFP).
Angry
environmentalists said compromises on other points gutted the plan, but
politicians defended it as the best that could be expected.
A
pact to reduce the warming of the Earth's atmosphere took a step closer
as Russian Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov announced Moscow's intention
to ratify the Kyoto Protocol "in the very near future".
The
pact is designed to reduce the emission of "greenhouse gases",
which prevent heat from radiating out into space, causing temperatures
to rise worldwide, with resultant droughts and the melting of the
ice-caps, causing the sea-level to rise.
Ratification
by Russia will ensure that the pact takes effect, despite U.S.
opposition to it.
"The
Johannesburg World Summit will go down in history as a missed
opportunity to deliver energy to the two billion people on this planet
with no access to energy services, and as a failure to kick start the
renewable energy revolution that is required to protect the
climate," said a statement issued by WWF, Oxfam and Greenpeace.
"Nothing
for the poor, nothing for the climate."
Oxfam's
Andrew Hewett said of the political leaders, “Most of them lacked the
guts and will to achieve a brave and far-reaching agreement that might
have effectively tackled the problems of poverty and the decaying
environment. It was within their grasp.”
However,
French President Jacques Chirac said that despite limited results, he
believed the summit was "a step in the right direction".
"The
texts have a limited range, perhaps," he said at a press
conference, "but they undoubtedly demonstrate an awareness, and an
advance."
He
acknowledged that the negotiations were difficult, but said he was more
optimistic Tuesday even than when he arrived in Johannesburg Monday,
September 2.
On
Monday, Chirac said, "Our house is burning down and we're blind to
it. Nature, mutilated and over-exploited, can no longer regenerate, and
we refuse to admit it... the Earth and mankind are in danger, and we are
all responsible."
The
plan, which world leaders are due to endorse Wednesday, September 4,
covers action for providing fresh water, sewerage and electricity for
the very poor and slowing the planet's loss of biodiversity and
depletion of fisheries and forests.
However,
only a few of these goals have a deadline attached to them, and details
about how they will be achieved - the funds, skills and transfer of
technology - are sketchy.
The
rich world is offering no new commitments on development aid, other than
pledges made at a summit in Monterey, Mexico, last March, nor has it
gone beyond vague promises to negotiate a deal for phasing out its farm
support, according to AFP.
Nor
does the blueprint make any commitment on further canceling the debt of
the Third World.
A
coalition comprising the United States and oil-producing countries shot
down the European Union's demands for a timetable to give renewable
sources a bigger share of the global energy market.
Representatives
of big business said they recognized the need for corporate
accountability but regarded national, not global, reporting as the way
forward.
"The
best form of rules for reporting is at a national level," said
Richard Holme, deputy chairman of international Business Action for
Sustainable Development (BASD).
On
progress at the summit, Holme said: "We are happy there are goals
and targets that will allow business to plan ahead."
On
the sidelines of the controversial world event, Iraqi Deputy Prime
Minister Tareq Aziz met UN Secretary General Kofi Annan to discuss U.S.
threats to topple President Saddam Hussein.
"This
is a crisis," Aziz told reporters afterwards. "We are
preparing ourselves to defend our country."
However,
he said Iraq was ready to cooperate with the UN Security Council in a
hoped-for "magic solution" to the crisis.
Zambian
President Levy Mwanawasa vowed not to expose his people to
"poisonous" genetically modified food, being offered to aid
some 2.4 million Zambians facing starvation.
"Simply
because my people are hungry, that is no justification to give them
poison, to give them food that is intrinsically dangerous to their
health," Mwanawasa told journalists at a briefing