2010-06-25

G8 summit opens in Canada's Muskoka



The annual Group of Eight (G8) summit opened on Friday in Huntsville, Canada's Muskoka region, with leaders of the world's eight major industrialized countries set to discuss key challenges related to development and international peace and security.
The Muskoka 2010 G8 summit, with the theme of "Recovery and New Beginnings," gathered British Prime Minister David Cameron, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper, French President Nicolas Sarkozy, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, Japanese Prime Minister Naoto Kan, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, and US President Barack Obama.
European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Council President Herman Van Rompuy also joined the meeting, representing the European Union which has enjoyed observer status since 1977.
Heads of state or government from Algeria, Colombia, Egypt, Ethiopia, Haiti, Jamaica, Malawi, Nigeria, Senegal and South Africa were also invited to participate in the meeting.
At around 12:30 p.m. local time Friday, Canadian Prime Minister Harper, whose country holds the rotating G8 presidency, appeared at the entrance of the summit venue, the Deerhurst Resort in Huntsville, to greet the G8 and EU leaders on red carpet one by one. They shook hands and posed for pictures before entering the venue for a working lunch.
Key topics to be discussed during the summit include the United Nations Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), maternal, newborn and child health, food security, aid to Africa, and accountability of international forums including the G8 itself.

Albanian PM receives Abdullah bin Zayed

Albanian Prime Minister Sali Berisha received today in the Albanian capital, Tirana, UAE Foreign Minister Shaikh Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan.
Shaikh Abdullah conveyed the regards of the Vice President and Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai His Highness Shaikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum to the Albanian the Albanian Prime Minister and people, wishing them prosperity.


On his part, the Albanian PM conveyed his regards to the UAE Prime Minister, stressing keenness of his country to further enhance ties with the UAE.
The Albanian official welcomed during the meeting the visit of Sheikh Abdullah and his accompanying delegation to Albania. He hailed the economic development in the UAE, hoping for more growth of existing relations between the two countries.
During the meeting both sides discussed the bilateral relations and ways to boost them, especially in the developmental and investment areas.
Present were UAE Ambassador to Greece and non resident Ambassador to Albania Abdul Hadi Abdul Wahid Al Khaja and Mohammed Saif Hilal Al Shehhi, director of the Department of European Affairs at the Foreign Ministry.

Medvedev Promises Political Change but Offers Few Details

Tackling a sensitive issue that he has skirted around in the past, President Dmitry Medvedev has promised to implement political reforms aimed at bolstering the economy but insisted that they be carried out without foreign participation.


Medvedev, speaking to a friendly audience at California's Stanford University, acknowledged that the political system needed to be changed to achieve his goal of modernizing Russia.
"Our political system is constantly developing. … But we, certainly, are not guaranteed against mistakes and are ready to improve our political system," Medvedev said in a speech Wednesday.
Corruption and nepotism stemming from the nontransparency of the government, led by powerful Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, and aggravated by the weakness of all other political institutions are the main obstacles to the country's development, analysts say.
At home, Medvedev has usually avoided discussing changes to the political system, largely fashioned by his mentor, Putin. Just last Saturday, Medvedev said that while economic changes would affect politics, any political changes should not change the system.
"The economy cannot change while political structures remain absolutely stiff," Medvedev said in a speech at the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum. "But we will retain our values and adhere to our traditions and the Russian Constitution."
At Stanford, Medvedev did not specify which political changes might be in the works.
While Medvedev is seen as more liberal than Putin in the West, his credentials for politic reform are few. Among other things, he has amended the Constitution to extend presidential terms to six years — a change that even Putin refused to oversee as president, despite numerous calls to the contrary.
While pledging political changes, Medvedev immediately ruled out foreign involvement in the process. "We will do it ourselves, as we say, without lectures from the outside," he said Wednesday.
Under Putin, the Kremlin has developed a strong phobia of Western governments seeking to undercut Russia's sovereignty, a fear that was bolstered by Western-backed regime changes in Georgia and Ukraine in the 2000s.
Medvedev, a lawyer by training, said legal reform would be a priority in the political overhaul.
"My task as the president is to raise the respect of the court system as much as possible and to provide an effectively working justice system, which is trusted by citizens, on this foundation," Medvedev said.
Medvedev, who has served more than half of his four-year presidential term, said he has already initiated several major economic and political reforms and is considering a bid for a second term in 2012 because he feels a responsibility to see those reforms through to completion.
He said a presidential bid would be linked to whether "plans that I have formulated are being implemented" and whether "there is support from our people."
Medvedev did not say he would consult with Putin, the other member of Russia's ruling tandem. In the past, Medvedev and Putin have replied to questions about the 2012 election by saying the decision depended on consultations with the other.
Speaking of Georgia, Medvedev reiterated his stance that the ties would only improve between the two countries when Georgia elects a new leader.
The Kremlin accuses President Mikheil Saakashvili, a staunch ally of the United States in the Caucasus, of unjustly using force to try to take back Georgia's separatist region of South Ossetia in August 2008. The attempt was quickly squashed by Russia in a five-day war.

2010-06-06

2010 Taiwan Low Carbon Activity - Premier WU Den-yih,speak with Media.


the Activity of 2010 Taiwan Low Carbon was opening on 5 June,2010 in Taipei - Premier WU Den-yih,Executive Yuan of Taiwan,Released at the scene that Energy and reduce carbon emissions on government policies with Local Media.(Report by Sandy Tseng/Michael D.LIN-Taipei,Taiwan)