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How four Tamilians rescued Warsaw climate talks that led to Paris pact

The COP in Warsaw appeared doomed from the start, almost collapsed midway, and nearly broke up in acrimony towards the end. The conference was rescued from total failure by Burhan Gafoor and TS Tirumurti with no small help from a third Tamilian, Vivian Balakrishnan 

November 19, 2021 / 15:13 IST
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A report from AIR Worldwide, a global risk modeling firm, estimates that now each year extreme weather is costing $320 billion around the world, with only about one-third of it insured. (Image: AP)

As the 26th Climate Change conference (COP 26) wound down in Glasgow, Scotland, amidst punditry whether it was a success or failure, the banter at the United Nations headquarters in New York was that there could be no progress at any such Conference of Parties (COP) unless Tamil was used to bridge differences. Credit for this wisecrack goes to Singapore’s Permanent Representative to the UN, Burhan Gafoor in conversation with his Indian counterpart, TS Tirumurti, in the curious presence of several diplomats at the UN.

Gafoor is a Singaporean of Tamil origin. Tirumurti is from Chennai, and is so much of a Chennaivasi that he has written a highly-acclaimed book of fiction by that name. Gafoor and Tirumurti share a special bond, which many diplomats at the UN have tapped into throughout the vexatious and contentious COP26 for guidance: these two Tamilians were the senior-most officials from Singapore and India respectively at COP19 in Warsaw in 2013.

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The Warsaw Climate Change Conference was the most dramatic of all such meetings with the exception, perhaps of COP1in Berlin, where it all started in 1995. Malayalam was the mother-tongue of the main Indian official at COP1, but more on that later.

The COP in Warsaw appeared doomed from the start, and almost collapsed midway when its President, a Pole, was dismissed. It nearly broke up in acrimony towards the end when China and the Group of 77 (G-77), including India, walked out. The conference was rescued from total failure by Gafoor and Tirumurti with no small help from a third Tamilian, Vivian Balakrishnan, now the Foreign Minister of Singapore. During COP19, Balakrishnan was in Warsaw, and as Singapore’s Minister for Environment, led the island state’s delegation. A fourth Tamilian among the dramatis personae was India’s Environment Minister, Jayanthi Natarajan, but she played no proactive role except to give her formal nod to what Gafoor and Tirumurti, burning midnight oil, worked out to salvage the conference.