Iran's Right to Nuclear Energy

Iran's Right to Nuclear Energy

Today, at the Climate Summit in Copenhagen, the world's cameras will be watching and listening to the words of Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.

Many will want to know what Iran's controversial president has to say about the need to control climate, especially as his own country is the tenth biggest producer of Green House gas.

There will also be those who will fear that Ahmadinejad's controversial comments about the Holocaust and his attacks against the West may hijack the main theme of the conference, which is the need to address and solve climate-related issues. This is why Libya did not invite Ahmadinejad to the African Union summit earlier this year. The main heads of African states wanted the participants and the press to focus on Africa's problems. They did not want the discussions to suddenly change, because of President Ahmadinejad's contentious opinions and ideas about Israel and the United States.

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