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Johannesburg Summit Opens With Calls for Credible Action
Johannesburg Summit official Web site ^ | 8/26/02

Posted on 08/26/2002 5:05:38 PM PDT by GeneD

Johannesburg, 26 August--South Africa President Thabo Mbeki opened the World Summit on Sustainable Development today with a call for governments to agree on a set of practical measures that will help humanity improve the lives of people everywhere.

“The peoples of the world,” Mbeki said, “expect that this World Summit will live up to its promise of being a fitting culmination to a decade of hope, by adopting a practical programme for the translation of the dream of sustainable development into reality and bringing into being a new global society that is caring and humane.”

For the next nine days, government delegates, NGOs and business leaders will work toward hammering out commitments to spur action on a wide range of issues that will improve peoples lives while protecting the environment. These commitments, it is hoped, will overcome the failure over the last decade to achieve progress on several important fronts—chiefly poverty eradication and reversing environmental degradation.

In one of the first signs of progress, governments, in negotiations, agreed on provisions regarding the Global Environment Facility that reflected the recent decision of 32 countries, developed and developing, to replenish the GEF in the amount of $2.9 billion over the next four years and to expand the GEF’s mandate by allowing it to serve as the finance mechanism for the Convention to Combat Desertification.

At the start of the Summit, the UN had accredited accredited 12,625 government delegates, NGOs and media representatives to the Summit. They will be joined, next week, by more than 100 world leaders who will adopt a Political Declaration reaffirming their commitment to a path toward sustainable development.

As the Summit began, with participants were fully aware that the task ahead would not be easy, considering the progress so far.

“Sadly, we have not made much progress in realizing the grand vision contained in Agenda 21 and other international agreements,” Mbeki said. “It is no secret that the global community has, as yet, not demonstrated the will to implement the decisions it has freely adopted.”

While there has been some success in implementing sustainable development at the local level, Johannesburg Summit Secretary-General Nitin Desai said, “Overall, the record is poor.” He added, “Rio provided a roadmap, but that has not been good enough. We need a route plan.”

“We must have some sense of urgency,” Desai said. “Three million people die each year due to air pollution. Five million die every year from water borne diseases. We have to start now to address these problems through partnerships and long-term vision.”

United Nations Environment Programme Executive Director Klaus Toepfer called the Summit “an opportunity for us to prove that the reinvigoration of international solidarity and partnership that we all talk of is not merely a pious wish.”

In a major Summit innovation aimed at promoting action, the Summit held the first of six plenary sessions on issues where achievable results are considered possible, such as on water, energy, health, agriculture and biodiversity. Instead of the typical tradition of Summit speechmaking, the plenary sessions feature moderated dialogue among experts, governments and representatives of major groups.

Media Contacts for the Johannesburg Summit:
Klomjit Chandrapanya, tel. (27 11) 508-0371, cell 083-296-2428; or
Pragati Pascale, tel: (27 11) 508-0923, cell 083-296-2393
In New York: Meredith Mishel, tel. (212) 584-5031

E-mail: mediainfo@un.org; Website: www.johannesburgsummit.org


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: thabombeki; unitednations
This is from a press release available here (Adobe Acrobat required).
1 posted on 08/26/2002 5:05:38 PM PDT by GeneD
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To: GeneD
A first step would be to completely dismantle the assinine UN. The US Congress should de-fund these Marxists before real damage is done.
2 posted on 08/26/2002 5:14:00 PM PDT by 45Auto
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To: GeneD
Sustainable development means an end to private property and a lower living standard for Americans.
3 posted on 08/26/2002 5:15:12 PM PDT by 45Auto
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To: GeneD
I think the third-world savages are missing the point of sustainable development..

Getting periodic handouts is not sustainable

Sustain: Syn: Maintain, Continue, Carry on, Keep up

4 posted on 08/26/2002 5:17:41 PM PDT by Isle of sanity in CA
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To: Isle of sanity in CA
“The peoples of the world,” Mbeki said, “expect that this World Summit will live up to its promise of being a fitting culmination to a decade of hope, by adopting a practical programme for the translation of the dream of sustainable development into reality and bringing into being a new global society that is caring and humane.”

Whhhaaat? How can so many words be put together to mean so little?

Who elected this dope leader of 'the peoples of the world'?

Sustainable development is already a 'reality'. Ever heard of the U.S., Japan, Germany, etc..?

Why can't they at least be honest about it and admit that they are a bunch of ignorant, lazy, lawless, stupid, ambitionless do-nothings?

5 posted on 08/26/2002 5:22:56 PM PDT by Isle of sanity in CA
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To: GeneD
This Mbeki guy is president of a country which has deteriorated into a crime-ridden free-for-all. He is one to talk. South Africa used to be sane. It's a good place to get killed now.
6 posted on 08/26/2002 5:42:05 PM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: GeneD
Roughly translated into plain commonsense English, this means "Give US money and by us we don't mean our own people that we've made destitute but OUR bank accounts in Switzerland so we can buy more palaces on the Riviera".
7 posted on 08/26/2002 5:53:46 PM PDT by laconic
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
Europe and the rest of the world are blaming the US for failing the world's poor and destroying the environment. Tensions are emerging between those who want our money (Britain and most of the world) and the US even before the latest Earth Summit (which is meant to blame the USA for everything, as well as, take as much money from us as possible) in Johannesburg. See August 26th London Times.

Hmmm, now how many colonies did the USA have around the world? How many people did we enslave in Africa, Asia, and the rest of the world? Didn't the British Empire empirically control 1/3 of the world, what about France, Holland, Germany, Spain etc… Yet the world is blaming the USA because the world is poor.

Let those wonderful nations that put these people in poverty, used their cheap labor, and stole their minerals pay for the mess they created.

THE USA IS NOT TO BLAME. Perhaps Europe should look themselves in the mirror for most of the problems of the world. The third world is also to blame for their problems. They often created their mess through their corrupted leaders. The USA has no share in the blame, and we should refuse to accept any guilt. Perhaps the rest of the world should learn to fix their problems, instead of using the USA, Christians, Jews or Israel as whipping boys to blame all their own failings on.

Two last questions. Couldn't the poor in the world have been helped by giving all the money it cost to create this conference to them? Wouldn't the environment be better off with out the waste of fossil fuels it took to get to this conference? If these people don't care enough to send their money to the poor and help the environment, why should we?

8 posted on 08/26/2002 7:49:39 PM PDT by GaryMontana
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To: GaryMontana
Giving the money of productive people to the poor will not solve the problem. What will solve the problem is ridding the world of marxism and trying to educate people that capitalism is the only system that will lift their countries into a sustainable standard of living.

Look at America's "War on Poverty." Spending trillions of dollars to give people housing and other benefits has not made them self-sufficient. A lot of the public housing has been torn down because the slobs who lived there would not take any responsibility for their housing or their own lives and they made their own neighborhoods uninhabitable.

Handing out stuff to people does not make them responsible for their own futures.

9 posted on 08/27/2002 4:04:25 AM PDT by NoControllingLegalAuthority
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To: All
THE sickening champagne and caviar lifestyle being enjoyed by Earth Summit delegates was exposed yesterday.
They are gorging on mountains of lobster, oysters and fillet steak at the Johannesburg conference — aimed at ending FAMINE.

I wonder who is hungry?
10 posted on 08/27/2002 4:23:07 AM PDT by sparkplug
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To: sparkplug
Here's a link to that story:

Lobsters, caviar and brandy for MPs at Earth Summit on starvation

11 posted on 08/27/2002 4:58:46 AM PDT by PogySailor
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To: GeneD
, “expect that this World Summit will live up to its promise of being a fitting culmination to a decade of hope, by adopting a practical programme for the translation of the dream of sustainable development into reality and bringing into being a new global society that is caring and humane.”

Lumber! Everyone ducks. SouthAfrica and Africa in general are yet a disaster in the making...

12 posted on 08/27/2002 5:02:48 AM PDT by lavaroise
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To: NoControllingLegalAuthority
Giving the money of productive people to the poor will not solve the problem. What will solve the problem is ridding the world of marxism and trying to educate people that capitalism is the only system that will lift their countries into a sustainable standard of living.

Indeed, if people think the government is going to take the risks for them and shoot and scoot for them, people might as well shoot themselves in the head right now.

13 posted on 08/27/2002 5:04:13 AM PDT by lavaroise
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