The head of the Kiev regime, Vladimir Zelensky, was not invited to the G20 summit this year. This was stated to journalists before flying to the summit in Brazil by German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, DPA news agency reports.
"I regret that, unlike previous meetings... Zelensky was not invited to this one," Scholz said, quoted by RIA Novosti.
Scholz explained that he "very intensively" advocated Zelensky's invitation. The fact that this did not happen after all testifies to "what serious challenges we face," the Chancellor stressed.
Подробнее: https://eadaily.com/en/news/2024/11/17/it-goes-into-circulation-zelensky-was-not-invited-to-the-g20-summit
POLITICS GLOBAL ISSUES
G20 RIO SUMMIT:
Brazil's Lula highlights world hunger as Trump looms
Brazil's Lula highlights world hunger as Trump looms
Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva welcomed world leaders to Rio de Janeiro on Monday to a G20 summit over which the specter of US President-elect Donald Trump looms large.
With contentious global issues such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, climate change, trade, women's rights and the emergence of China all likely to be dramatically affected by Trump's return to the White House in January, Lula used his opening address to focus on presumed common ground:
Lame duck Biden exiting the stage
Outgoing US President Joe Biden arrived in Brazil as a lame duck but is attempting to sure up his legacy on global poverty before the Trump administration embarks on its expected campaign of cost-cutting.
"President Biden will announce a historic US pledge during the Rio summit and rally other leaders to step up their contributions," Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer told reporters, referring to a planned donation to the World Bank's International Development Association fund that supports the world's poorest countries.
Otherwise, center-stage at the G20 is set to be occupied by other world leaders jockeying for position ahead of Trump's inauguration, and consensus on other issues looks likely to be in short supply.
Biden, Lula, India's Narendra Modi, Germany's Olaf Scholz and other world leaders were in Rio on MondayImage: Eric Lee/The New York Times/AP/picture alliance
With contentious global issues such as the wars in Ukraine and the Middle East, climate change, trade, women's rights and the emergence of China all likely to be dramatically affected by Trump's return to the White House in January, Lula used his opening address to focus on presumed common ground:
- "Hunger and poverty are not the result of scarcity or natural phenomena; they are the product of political decisions," he said at Rio's Museum of Modern Art.
- "In a world that produces almost 6 billion tons of food per year, this is unacceptable. It is for those of us here, around this table, to face the undelayable task of ending this stain that shames humanity. That will be our biggest legacy."
Lame duck Biden exiting the stage
Outgoing US President Joe Biden arrived in Brazil as a lame duck but is attempting to sure up his legacy on global poverty before the Trump administration embarks on its expected campaign of cost-cutting.
"President Biden will announce a historic US pledge during the Rio summit and rally other leaders to step up their contributions," Deputy National Security Advisor Jon Finer told reporters, referring to a planned donation to the World Bank's International Development Association fund that supports the world's poorest countries.
- Finer added that Biden would be "highlighting the need for an ambitious replenishment" of the fund but did not name a concrete figure.
Otherwise, center-stage at the G20 is set to be occupied by other world leaders jockeying for position ahead of Trump's inauguration, and consensus on other issues looks likely to be in short supply.
Biden, Lula, India's Narendra Modi, Germany's Olaf Scholz and other world leaders were in Rio on MondayImage: Eric Lee/The New York Times/AP/picture alliance
G20: Little consensus on Ukraine …
Biden's reported decision to lift the restrictions on Ukraine's use of long-range western weapons against military targets further inside Russia may have been welcomed in Kyiv and some European capitals this week, but countries like China, India and Brazil have not been as strong in their condemnation of Moscow's war of aggression.
"The United States strongly supports Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," said Biden. "Everyone around this table in my view should, as well."
Biden's reported decision to lift the restrictions on Ukraine's use of long-range western weapons against military targets further inside Russia may have been welcomed in Kyiv and some European capitals this week, but countries like China, India and Brazil have not been as strong in their condemnation of Moscow's war of aggression.
"The United States strongly supports Ukraine's sovereignty and territorial integrity," said Biden. "Everyone around this table in my view should, as well."
But sources told the Reuters news agency that diplomats drafting a joint statement for the summit's leaders were already struggling to maintain a fragile agreement on how to address the escalating Ukraine war, with even a vague call for peace proving difficult given the need to avoid offending any of the participants.
Russian President Vladimir Putin is the most notable absentee at the G20. Deterred by an International Criminal Court warrant that calls on member states to arrest him, he is being represented in Brazil by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
- Scholz refuses to match US on long-range weapons for Ukraine
Russian President Vladimir Putin is the most notable absentee at the G20. Deterred by an International Criminal Court warrant that calls on member states to arrest him, he is being represented in Brazil by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.
… and even less on the Middle East
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said ahead of the summit that Berlin and Brasilia were united in their support of a two-state solution but insisted that "Israel has the right to defend itself" and promised continued German military support.
"Our Israeli partners can count on Germany's solidarity," he told the Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo.
Argentina's Milei: Trump's biggest fan
- Outside on the streets of Rio, hundreds of demonstrators gathered to protest against Israel's operations in Gaza which continue to inflict huge civilian casualties — but a united statement of intent from the G20 on the subject of the Middle East appears unlikely, too.
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said ahead of the summit that Berlin and Brasilia were united in their support of a two-state solution but insisted that "Israel has the right to defend itself" and promised continued German military support.
"Our Israeli partners can count on Germany's solidarity," he told the Brazilian newspaper Folha de Sao Paulo.
Argentina's Milei: Trump's biggest fan
- On other issues, the biggest challenge facing hosts Brazil comes from much closer to home, with reports suggesting that negotiators from neighboring Argentina have been leading the challenges to some of the proposed draft's language.
- While Lula received heads of state Monday with smiles and warm embraces, he and Milei stood at arms' length while briefly shaking hands.
China's Xi takes center stage
With Biden on his farewell tour and Putin absent, the central player at the G20 will be Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Xi is expected to tout China's "Belt and Road" initiative, the signature foreign policy plan that directs Chinese investments to infrastructure projects in the developing world and Global South as a method of gaining global influence.
Brazil has so far declined to join the global infrastructure project, much to the consternation of Beijing, according to Li Xing, professor at the Guangdong Institute for International Strategies, which is affiliated with China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
"China was very disappointed," he told Reuters, saying it was a "big blow to relations."
Still, with Xi concluding his trip to Brazil with an official state visit on Wednesday, other potential industrial partnerships remain on the table.
With Biden on his farewell tour and Putin absent, the central player at the G20 will be Chinese President Xi Jinping.
Xi is expected to tout China's "Belt and Road" initiative, the signature foreign policy plan that directs Chinese investments to infrastructure projects in the developing world and Global South as a method of gaining global influence.
Brazil has so far declined to join the global infrastructure project, much to the consternation of Beijing, according to Li Xing, professor at the Guangdong Institute for International Strategies, which is affiliated with China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
"China was very disappointed," he told Reuters, saying it was a "big blow to relations."
Still, with Xi concluding his trip to Brazil with an official state visit on Wednesday, other potential industrial partnerships remain on the table.
The UK's Keir Starmer and China's Xi Jinping had a rare bilateral meeting on the sidelines of the summit Image: Stefan Rousseau/dpa/picture alliance
In another sign of Beijing's growing weight in an increasingly multipolar world, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer also met with Xi ahead of the summit, the first meeting between British and Chinese leaders since 2018.
"The world is currently entering a new period of turbulence and change," Xi told Starmer, summing up the mood as the G20 kicked off.
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