This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.
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| G20 leaders gather for a group picture on Friday |
This
week, leaders of the top industrial and developing economies gathered in the
eastern United States. They met in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, for a summit on
the world's financial future. Leaders of the Group of Twenty have now met three
times in less than a year to deal with the worst recession since the nineteen
thirties.
Many
of their governments have used spending programs to inject five trillion
dollars into their economies. These stimulus efforts have had some success. Now,
the question is how and when to withdraw that support without harming a
recovery, and how to avoid a repeat of the financial crisis.
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| Several groups -- from anarchists to Tibetan independence activists -- held protests outside the meeting in Pittsburgh. There were some clashes with police, and arrests. |
The leaders agreed to make the G20 the
main group for their international economic cooperation, instead of the G8. The
G20 is nineteen countries and the European Union. It includes fast-growing
economies in the developing world like China, India and Brazil.
Earlier
this week, world leaders attended the United Nations General Assembly in New
York. President Obama, in a speech on Wednesday, sought to distance himself
from some of the policies of George W. Bush.
BARACK OBAMA: "Those who used to chastise America
for acting alone in the world cannot now stand by and wait for American to
solve the world's problems alone. We have sought in word and deed for a new era
of engagement with the world."
On
Thursday, the Security Council approved a resolution to increase efforts toward
a world without nuclear weapons. All fifteen members voted for the resolution
proposed by the United States.
The five permanent
members are the United States, Britain, China, France and Russia. Those five
plus Germany have been preparing to meet with Iranian negotiators on October
first to discuss Iran's nuclear program.
On Friday, there were new demands for
Iran to follow Security Council resolutions to halt nuclear enrichment. The American,
British and French leaders announced that Iran has been secretly building a
second enrichment center for several years.
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| President Obama speaking about Iran, with French President Nicolas Sarkozy, left, and British Prime Minister Gordon Brown |
American officials
say the information was made public after Iran discovered that Western
intelligence agencies knew about the facility. Iran informed the International
Atomic Energy Agency in Vienna earlier this week.
Enriched uranium can be used as fuel for nuclear energy
-- as Iran says -- or it can be used for nuclear bombs. French President Nicolas
Sarkozy said, "If by December, there is not an in-depth change by the
Iranian leaders, sanctions will have to be taken."
In
New York, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said President Obama will
regret saying that Iran has been building a secret facility. He said Iran met
I.A.E.A. rules by informing the agency early enough that the facility was being
built. Russia and China both urged Iran to cooperate with the U.N. nuclear
agency on any investigation.
And that's IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English. For more
news from the G20 meeting, go to voaspecialenglish.com. I'm Steve Ember.