china has dismissed allegations made by a british minister that it was responsible for
the near collapse
wigof climate negotiations in copenhagen.
climate change secretary ed miliband had singled out china for vetoing an agreement on limiting emissions.
beijing said his comments were part of a political scheme to "provoke discord among developing countries".
the copenhagen summit ended without the 192 countries present reaching a firm agreement on climate change.
the delegates simply committed to "taking note" of
wiga deal recognising the need to limit temperature rises to 2c.
chinese foreign ministry spokeswoman jiang yu did not mention mr miliband by name, but
wicker basketin comments reported by the xinhua state news agency, she said statements from "certain british politicians" were "plainly a political scheme".
the aim, she said, was "to shirk responsibilities that should be assumed towards developing countries, and to provoke discord among developing countries".
"this scheme will come to nothing," said ms jiang.
'new beginning'
writing in britain's guardian news on sunday, mr miliband said the vast majority
wigof countries wanted a legally-binding treaty to protect
wicker basketthe planet but it appeared four or five countries at the summit had been keen to "shelve the accord".