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Bush Turns His Back on World Summit
WASHINGTON, DC, August 19,
2002 (ENS) - Secretary of State Colin
Powell will lead the American delegation
to the World Summit on Sustainable
Development, to be held in Johannesburg,
South Africa from August 26 through
September 4. President George W. Bush
made the announcement late today, giving
no explanation as to why he will not be
attending the summit to join 106 other
world leaders on the speaker's podium.
U.S. President George W. Bush (Photo
courtesy The White House)
Secretary Powell will be joined by
Environmental Protection Agency
Administrator Christie Todd Whitman,
Chairman of the Council on Environmental
Quality James Connaughton, U.S. Agency
for International Development
Administrator Andrew Natsios, and Under
Secretary of State Paula Dobriansky, the
President said.
Secretary of State Colin Powell (Photo
courtesy U.S. State Dept.)
The World Summit on Sustainable
Development is sponsored by the United
Nations as a 10 year follow up to the
1992 Earth Summit in Rio de Janeiro,
which was attended by then President
George H.W. Bush, father of the current
President.
Other heads of government and heads
of state who are on the speakers list in
Johannesburg include all the other
leaders of G8 countries - UK Prime
Minister Tony Blair, Canadian Prime
Minister Jean Chretien, German
Chancellor Gerhard Schroeder, Italian
President Silvio Berlusconi and Russia's
Vladimir Putin among them.
President Bush has been under
pressure from Republican Party and
conservative lobbyists not to attend the
summit.
A letter to Bush made public Friday
by Friends of the Earth UK shows the
nature of that pressure. Dated August 2,
the letter is signed by 31 political
groups and individuals. It says “We
applaud your decision not to attend the
summit in person."
"Even more than the Earth Summit
in Rio in 1992," the letter says,
"the Johannesburg Summit will
provide a global media stage for many of
the most irresponsible and destructive
elements involved in critical
international economic and environmental
issues. Your presence would only help to
publicize and make more credible various
anti-freedom, anti-people,
anti-globalization, and anti-Western
agendas.”
Signatories to the letter include
representatives of seven think tanks
that receive funding from oil giant
ExxonMobil, according to figures in an
official Exxon document. http://www2.exxonmobil.com/files/corporate/public_policy1.pdf
The lobbyists' letter states that
“the least important global
environmental issue is potential global
warming, and we hope that your
negotiators at Johannesburg can keep it
off the table and out of the
spotlight.”
In his announcement today, President
Bush said the U.S. team will offer plans
that "advance the new approach to
development that I embraced with other
national leaders at the Monterrey
Conference on Financing for Development
this past May."
"This new approach is based on
shared accountability among developed
and developing nations," the
President said.
"The U.S. delegation will come
to Johannesburg with concrete and
practical proposals for strong and
lasting partnerships to advance some of
the world's key development priorities -
clean water, modern energy, good health,
and productive agriculture - that can
lead us to a world without
poverty," said President Bush.
A U.S. federal government report
prepared for the World Summit on
Sustainable Development issued today
says the U.S. team will be promoting
"good governance" and
anticorruption at the summit, in
particular "an integrated, cross-sectoral
approach to addressing governance and
sustainable development."
"The U.S. Government promotes
good governance in every region of the
world and believes that a good
governance component makes
environmentally oriented programs more
effective. USAID [U.S. Agency for
International Development] is the lead
agency in this work, providing $700
million annually to support an array of
democracy and governance
activities," the report says.
The criteria of good governance, the
government report says are:
- democratic institutions that are
effective, accountable, and
transparent
- an independent and fair judiciary
- law enforcement that - with
integrity - protects the people
while strengthening their capacity
to combat corruption
- sound monetary; fiscal, and trade
policies that promote economic
growth, social development, and
environmental protection
- participation by all members of
civil society in decisions that
affect them
The United States gives many hundreds
of millions of dollars annually in aid
and humanitarian relief to developing
nations, and the Bush administration is
making it clear that corrupt governments
will not be in line for American aid.
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