December 22, 2009 8:57 PM

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Govt. rejects opposition charge of compromising with country's interest at Copenhagen meet

Government has rejected Opposition charge of compromising with the country's interests at Copenhagen climate meet, insisting that the Accord will in no way affect India's sovereignty. Environment Minister Jairam Ramesh said in the Rajya Sabha that the government had digressed from its pre-Copenhagen assurance on one aspect that is allowing provision for international consultation and analysis rather than just informing the UNFCCC about domestic mitigation programmes. The Minister argued that India had to be flexible as it, along with China, Brazil and South Africa, did not want to be responsible for failure of the meet and be blame boys.<br/><br/>Allaying fears on the provision of consultations, Mr. Ramesh said, India had decades of experience on such discussions with IMF and WTO and no sovereignty has been eroded.<br/><br/>While seeking clarifications, BJP, CPI(M) and CPI dubbed the Copenhagen Accord as disappointing, a compromise document and an attempt to jettison the Kyoto Protocol and Bali Action Plan. Equating the Copenhagen Accord with Sharm-el Sheikh Indo-Pak Joint Statement, Leader of Opposition Arun Jaitley said the government is trying to interpret the Accord differently by engaging in spin doctoring.

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