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Speaking for EU Sarkozy calls for “new Bretton Woods summit”

Thursday, October 16th 2008 - 20:00 UTC
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President Nicolas Sarkozy President Nicolas Sarkozy

All 27 European Union states broadly support the bank rescue plan proposed for the bloc and the holding of a world finance summit, France's president has said.

Nicolas Sarkozy, whose country currently chairs the EU presidency, was speaking at the EU summit in Brussels. The heads of the G8 top industrialised nations also backed holding a summit with other non-member states on global financial reform. UK PM Gordon Brown has called for the IMF to be rebuilt. Euro zone leaders agreed at the weekend on a comprehensive package designed to shore up banks, including making more than a 1,000 billion Euros (1,366 billion US dollars) available for inter-bank loans. "The whole of Europe, without exception, approves the measures adopted on Sunday in Paris," Mr Sarkozy said. But he added that EU states had not yet reached a definitive agreement on the text of the banking agreement. Mr Sarkozy said the EU wanted to launch "a new Bretton Woods summit" in November, referring to the 1944 meeting which led to the creation of the International Monetary Fund and other global institutions. China and India needed to be involved in the discussions, he said, adding: "We're moving towards a G8 plus - the crisis is so great that it needs to include the whole world." In a joint statement on Wednesday, the leaders of the G8 countries - the US, UK, France, Italy, Germany, Canada, Japan and Russia - said that changes had to be made to the "regulatory and institutional regimes for the world's financial sectors to remedy deficiencies exposed by the current crisis". "We look forward to a leaders' meeting with key countries at an appropriate time in the near future to adopt an agenda for reforms to meet the challenges of the 21st Century," the statement added. Gordon Brown told the BBC that global action was needed to deal with the financial crisis, and he predicted a summit would be held within weeks. Mr Sarkozy was also pushing hard at the Brussels summit, which ends on Thursday, for an agreement on climate change and energy action by the end of the year. This was vital, he said, if Europe was to maintain its leadership on the world stage. With a recession looming, Italy and Poland are threatening to block the climate change package, which they say is a burden for industry. "I'm not giving up on the timetable," said Mr Sarkozy. "We'll strive to find a good compromise within two and a half months." In other summit business, talks on a new EU-Russia partnership treaty were postponed, amid continuing concern about Russia's military presence in Georgia. There were divisions about when to resume them. A decision to revive the failed Lisbon treaty, meant to give the EU more stable institutions in difficult times, is expected to be put on the back-burner until December. Irish Prime Minister Brian Cowen promised to come up with an action plan by then on the best way to move ahead next year.

Categories: Economy, International.

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