Chinese President Hu Jintao, one of the five leaders of fast-growing 
economies invited to join the Group of Eight summit discussions on Monday, urged 
G-8 leaders to work more closely with developing nations. 
"In the world today, peace, development and cooperation are the call of the 
times," he told fellow world leaders. 
But "the problems and challenges confronting human development have 
increased," he said, citing rising oil prices, trade protectionism, terrorism, 
environmental pollution, infectious disease and terrorism. 
Hu said global energy security -- an issue demanding international cooperation 
-- is "crucial to ensuring the economic growth and people's livelihood of all 
countries and to maintaining peace and stability and promoting common 
development." 
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva focused on trade, telling G-8 
leaders that the stalled Doha Round of trade talks is a "political crisis" that 
he blamed on a lack of leadership. 
He urged world leaders to act decisively on talks on new rules aimed at 
breaking down trade barriers. Negotiators now have until mid-August to find 
agreement on the Doha Round launched in 2001 -- a process already two years 
behind schedule. 
South African President Thabo Mbeki and leaders of the African Union spoke of 
the lack of access to education on the continent, particularly for girls and 
young women. 
"Without stability in Africa, there will be no world peace," Hu said, urging 
more First World attention to stability and development in Africa. 
Three of the five countries invited to join the G-8 -- Brazil, India and 
Mexico -- boast bigger economies than summit host Russia. 
But Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose nation hosts the 2007 summit, said she 
saw no reason to expand the G-8 to include members with burgeoning economies. 
She said Monday that poverty -- a topic some non-governmental agencies 
complained was inadequately addressed at St. Petersburg -- would be at the top of 
the agenda in Heiligendamm in 2007. 
Also invited to the joint working session of the G-8 were the leaders of 
Kazakhstan and Congo, representing regional organizations; U.N. 
Secretary-General Kofi Annan; African Union chairman Denis Sassou-Nguesso; 
Mohamed ElBaradei, director-general of the International Atomic Energy Agency; 
Koichiro Matsuura of UNESCO; International Energy Agency director Claude Mandil; 
World Bank President Paul Wolfowitz; Pascal Lamy, director-general of the World 
Trade Organization; and the acting director-general of the World Health 
Organization, Anders Nordstrom. 
At the close of the session they adopted a statement condemning the train 
bombings last week in India that killed more than 180 people. 
"We are outraged by the barbaric terrorist acts" carried out in Bombay, they 
said, expressing a determination to "continue the fight against terrorism by all 
legitimate means. 
"We are united with India in our resolve to intensify efforts to fight 
terrorism, which constitutes a threat to each of our country, as well as to 
international peace and security."