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Small islands win UN vote on climate change security |
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Wednesday, 03 June 2009 |
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By Claudia Parsons UNITED NATIONS, June 3 (Reuters) - Small
Pacific islands vulnerable to rising sea levels won a symbolic victory
at the United Nations on Wednesday with the passage of a resolution
recognizing climate change as a possible threat to security.
The
non-binding resolution, passed by consensus by the General Assembly,
may help put climate change on the agenda of the more powerful U.N.
Security Council, which deals with threats to international peace and
security. General Assembly resolutions are largely symbolic but
can carry moral weight. Several representatives said this one was
important as the first to explicitly link climate change to security --
a principle previously resisted by powerful Security Council members
including Russia and China, who questioned whether the issue belonged
in the Security Council. "We are of the firm view that the
adverse impacts of climate change have very real implications for
international peace and security," Nauru Ambassador Marlene Moses told
the General Assembly, speaking on behalf of the Pacific Small Island
Developing States which introduced the resolution. Moses said
small islands were already experiencing the "dire and immediate
impacts" of climate change, including the inundation of coastal areas,
the submergence of islands, loss of freshwater supplies, flooding,
drought, damaged crops and increased disease. The resolution
said the 192-member General Assembly was "deeply concerned that the
adverse impacts of climate change, including sea-level rise, could have
possible security implications." It invited all relevant U.N.
bodies to intensify efforts to address climate change and asked
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to submit a report on possible security
implications. Agreed after months of bargaining, the resolution
was passed as climate change negotiators from 181 governments meet in
Bonn, Germany for talks on a new U.N. climate treaty due to be agreed
in Copenhagen in December. Governments face six months of tough
negotiations on a draft text they have accepted as a starting point for
talks on a treaty to curb the use of fossil fuels and widen the fight
against climate change beyond the existing Kyoto Protocol. (Edited by
Alan Elsner)
SOURCE: http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/N03111543.htm
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