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Leaders turn attention to poverty, ecology
GENOA (ITALY), JULY 21. Leaders of the world's major industrial
countries, struggling to regain control of a summit marred by a
protester's death, said on Saturday that they were providing real
help to the billion people in the world living in extreme
poverty.
But the Group of Eight summit's emphasis on global poverty did
not satisfy anti-globalisation protesters. They called on the
leaders to halt the meetings because of the death of Mr. Carlo
Giuliani, a 23-year-old Italian protester, killed by police the
day before.
Police fired tear gas at demonstrators again on Saturday as tens
of thousands of marchers flooded the streets near the
international summit here. Many in the crowd shouted ``Assassins,
assassins!''. Leaders at the summit, while expressing sorrow over
the death, said, ``our work goes on''. The leaders of the United
States, Japan, Germany, Britain, France, Canada, Italy and Russia
faced a full agenda on their second day of talks on Saturday,
including discussion of such hotspots as West Asia and Macedonia,
and global warming.
In a joint statement issued on Friday, the leaders of the summit
countries condemned ``the violence overflowing into anarchy of a
small minority'' and pledged to carry forward with their
discussions.
Most of the tens of thousands of marchers - representing trade
unions, environmental organisations, farmers, anarchist groups
and the unemployed - were demonstrating peacefully to express
anger and concern over the ill-effects of globalisation and the
widening gap between rich and poor.
Meanwhile, the protests were spreading, with demonstrations in
Greece, Germany, Switzerland and Canada.
There were signs that the G-8 countries, which had already
refashioned their annual gatherings in an effort to show more
concern about poor countries, were searching for ways to do more.
The Italian Foreign Minister, Mr. Renato Ruggiero, said the next
G-8, to be held in Canada in 2002, could take another form. He
said on issues, the global health fund created this year could be
followed next year by a fund to support education in poor
nations.
The Canadian Prime Minister, Mr. Jean Chretien, has said he was
studying the possibility of moving the discussions to a smaller,
more out-of-the way place.
The U.S. President, Mr. George W. Bush, in his weekly radio
address, highlighted the summit's efforts to help poor nations,
including the leaders' pledge to get personally involved in a
launching a new round of global trade talks, something that
demonstrators helped to prevent at a riot-marred meeting in
Seattle in 1999. ``Our discussions here in Europe centre on some
great goals,'' Mr. Bush said. ``We want to spread the benefits of
free trade as far and as wide as possible.''
The British Prime Minister, Mr. Tony Blair, said the summit's
biggest achievement - creation of a new global health fund to
combat AIDS - wouldn't have happened without the hands-on
involvement of the leaders.
As photographers snapped pictures, the French President, Mr.
Jacques Chirac, held up his hand for a high-five greeting to Mr.
Bush, who instead extended his arm for a more statesmanlike low
handshake.
Mr. Chirac and Mr. Bush continued to be at odds over the Kyoto
treaty on Saturday, and the French feared they were becoming
increasingly isolated.
French sources said Mr. Chirac pleaded once again for language
restricting greenhouse gas emissions. However, the British, the
Germans and Italians proposed that the final statement stress
just the broad objectives of Kyoto.
The summit ends on Sunday with a final statement. Talks on
Saturday centred around trying to find language that all the
eight could accept.
- AP
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