G-8 Reaches Africa, Climate Deals
In Shadow Of London Bombings, Leaders Pledge $50B For Africa
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Play CBS Video Video G8 Summit 'Success' Leaders at the G8 Summit in Scotland are calling it a success, in spite of the terror attacks in London. CBS News' Thalia Assuras reports with the latest.
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Video Blair: Terrorists Won't Win In Scotland, British Prime Minister Tony Blair, with leaders of the G8 nations alongside him, declared that the terrorists would not prevail.
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Video London Looks For Answers Trains were up and running again as London tried to go back to normal. But investigators still face the daunting task of searching for clues -- and casualties, John Roberts reports.
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British Prime Minister Tony Blair, flanked by U.S. President George W. Bush and French President Jacques Chirac, gives statement on London terror attacks Thursday. (AP)
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Photo Essay G-8 Summit A meeting of the world's biggest powers starts with protests and pauses for a tragedy.
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Photo Essay Live 8 Musicians raise awareness with concerts around the globe.
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Fast Facts United Kingdom Learn about the people, economy and history.
Describing the agreement on climate change, Blair said merely that the plan of action "will initiate a new dialogue" between the summit countries and leaders from developing economies who also met with them.
The leaders, struggling to keep to their mission in the aftermath of deadly bombings that rocked London's rush hour on Thursday, shortened the final day of their summit to allow Blair to rush back to lead a government panel dealing with the blasts.
On Thursday, Blair had left the summit for several hours to confer with officials at Scotland Yard and calm a nation shocked by the worst attacks on the capital since World War II. Though he later returned, business did not proceed as planned.
Mr. Bush left Gleneagles earlier than scheduled Friday. Upon arriving in Washington, the president was going straight to the British Embassy to sign a condolence book on behalf of the American people.
Also reflecting the London attacks, the series of summit communiqués were to include a beefed-up section on terrorism. Aides to the leaders worked late into the night on this document, which was described as a progress report on what their countries are doing in the global war on terrorism.
Within hours of the London bombings, Mr. Bush and the other leaders issued a special joint statement that condemned "these barbaric acts."
"We are united in our resolve to confront and defeat this terrorism that is not an attack on one nation, but on all nations and on civilized people everywhere," the leaders said.
In his closing statement Friday, Blair said: "There is no hope in terrorism, nor any future in it worth living. And it is hope that is the alternative to this hatred, so we offer today this contrast with the politics of terror."
Despite the leaders' expressions of anti-terror solidarity, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hinted Western countries were being hypocritical because they do not call Chechen rebels international terrorists.
Russian has objected vehemently to Britain's granting asylum to a top Chechen rebel representative, Akhmed Zakayev, and the United States giving refuge to another, Ilyas Akahmatov.
"It is highly dangerous and misleading to think that those who support and encourage terrorism can be called political figures," Lavrov said in Moscow.
On climate change, the United States, the only G-8 country that has not ratified the 1997 Kyoto Protocol on global warming, was successful in rejecting Blair's call for setting specific targets and a timetable for reducing greenhouse emissions, according to a draft obtained by The Associated Press on Friday.
The communique was to acknowledge the split between the United States and the other countries in a section that said "those of us who have ratified the Kyoto Protocol, welcome its entry into force and will work to make it a success." That was the document's only mention of the treaty put into effect this February. Mr. Bush contends the Kyoto accord's curbs on greenhouse emissions would wreck the U.S. economy.
Still, supporters of more aggressive action said that the United States had agreed to a document that stated "while uncertainty remains in our understanding of climate science, we know enough to act now." French President Jacques Chirac called that compromise language a "visible, real evolution" in the American position.
©MMV, CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."




