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Czech President Vaclav Klaus sharply criticized a U.N. meeting on climate change on Wednesday at which U.S. President Barack Obama was among the top speakers, describing it as propagandistic and undignified.
"It was sad and it was frustrating," said Klaus, one of the world's most vocal skeptics on the topic of global warming.
"It's a propagandistic exercise where 13-year-old girls from some
far-away country perform a pre-rehearsed poem," he said. "It's simply
not dignified."
At the opening of the summit attended by nearly 100 world leaders,
13-year-old Yugratna Srivastava of India told the audience that
governments were not doing enough to combat the threat of climate
change.
Klaus said there were increasing doubts in the scientific community
about whether humans are causing changes in the climate or whether the
changes are simply naturally occurring phenomena.
But politicians, he said, seem to be moving closer to a consensus on climate change.
"The train can't be stopped and I consider that a huge mistake," Klaus said.
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon organized the climate summit to
help create momentum before a U.N. meeting in Copenhagen in December to
reach agreement on new targets for reducing so-called greenhouse gas
emissions.
However, new proposals by China and a rallying cry from U.S. President Barack Obama did little to break a U.N. deadlock about what should be done.
Klaus published a book in 2007 on the worldwide campaign to stop
climate change entitled "Blue Planet in Green Chains: What Is Under
Threat -- Climate or Freedom?"
In the book, Klaus said global warming has turned into a new
religion, an ideology that threatens to undermine freedom and the
world's economic and social order.
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