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Golf carts divide heads of state

Reuters
Sunday, July 16, 2006 23:44 IST
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ST PETERSBURG: To ride in a golf cart or not to ride? That was the question driving a wedge between G8 leaders even before they sat down for talks on Sunday. The G8 leaders are trying to bridge differences on the Middle East, energy and Iran's nuclear programme. But on how to travel around the summit site they looked far apart. US President George W Bush was firmly in the golf cart camp.

He was behind the wheel of his hi-tech electric buggy as he made the short journey across the G8 venue on the shores of the Gulf of Finland for the opening session of talks.But German Chancellor Angela Merkel chose to arrive in a conventional car. And British Prime Minister Tony Blair took a third option-- he walked. French President Jacques Chirac rode in a golf buggy, though only in the passenger seat. That was a change from the 2004 G8 summit in Sea Island, Georgia -- the last time buggies were used at the forum. Then, Chirac had insisted on walking. Japanese Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi pulled up in the passenger seat of his buggy, as did Italy's Romano Prodi.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper and European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso also took the buggy option. The summit is being held in an 18th century palace near St Petersburg. Organisers laid on the buggies to ferry delegations from cottages in the grounds where they are accommodated.

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