RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil
Leaders from the Group of 20 major economies on Monday (Nov 19) issued a joint statement highlighting the suffering caused by conflicts in Gaza and Ukraine, while calling for co-operation on climate change, poverty reduction and tax policy.
G20 leaders meeting at Rio de
Janeiro's Modern Art Museum for a two-day summit tackled an agenda that
reflected a shifting global order, trying to shore up multilateral consensus
before US President-elect Donald Trump returns to power in January.
Their discussions of trade,
climate change and international security will run up against the sharp US
policy changes that Trump vows upon taking office, from tariffs to the promise
of a negotiated solution to the war in Ukraine.
Still, leaders at the summit
were able to reach a narrow consensus on the escalating Ukraine war, focused
succinctly on "human suffering" and the economic fallout of the
conflict.
The leaders' statement also
expressed "deep concern about the catastrophic humanitarian situation in
the Gaza Strip," and called urgently for more aid and protection for
civilians along with a comprehensive ceasefire in Gaza and Lebanon.
After a massive Russian air
strike in Ukraine on Sunday, European diplomats had pushed to revisit the
previously agreed language on global conflicts, but they ultimately relented.
Russian President Vladimir
Putin did not attend the summit, and Moscow was represented by Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov.
It took marathon negotiations
over the weekend for diplomats to finalize the joint statement, with debate
over climate policy stretching into the dawn hours of Sunday, according to
people involved in the talks.
In their statement, leaders
agreed the world needs to reach a deal by the end of the United Nations COP29
climate change summit in Azerbaijan on a new financial goal for how much money
rich nations must provide to poorer developing nations.
COP29 officials had called on
the G20 leaders for a strong signal to help breach the impasse on climate
finance. While the joint statement said nations need to resolve the issue, they
did not indicate what should be the solution at the UN summit set to end on
Friday.
As host of this year's G20
meetings, Brazil expanded the group's focus on extreme poverty and hunger,
while introducing debate on co-operation to fairly tax the world's wealthiest -
topics also highlighted in the leaders' joint statement.
Brazilian President Luiz
Inacio Lula da Silva opened the summit on Monday with the launch of a global
alliance to combat poverty and hunger, with backing from more than 80
countries, along with multilateral banks and major philanthropies.
"Hunger and poverty are
not the result of scarcity or natural phenomena ... they are the product of
political decisions," said Lula, who was born into poverty and entered
politics organising a metalworker’s union.
"In a world that produces
almost six billion tons of food per year, this is unacceptable," he said.
Brazilian officials recognised
the rest of their agenda for the G20 - including sustainable development and
taxing the super-rich - could lose steam when Trump starts dictating global
priorities from the White House.
Still, world leaders
acknowledged that Brazil's agenda as chair, embraced by 2025 host South Africa,
had pushed debate beyond the traditional comfort zone of Western powers.
"We are experiencing a
major, major change in global structures," German Chancellor Olaf Scholz
said on the sidelines of the summit, noting the growing weight of major
developing economies. "These are countries that want to have their say.
And they will no longer accept that everything will continue to be the way it
has been for decades."
Chinese President Xi Jinping
took the occasion to announce a raft of measures designed to support the
developing economies of the "Global South," from scientific
co-operation with Brazil and African nations to lowering trade barriers for
least developed countries.
While Xi played a central role
at the summit, US President Joe Biden arrived as a lame duck with just two
months left in the White House as he juggles escalating conflicts in Ukraine
and the Middle East.
As the world awaits signals
from Trump's incoming government, Xi has been touting China's economic
ascendancy, including its vaunted Belt & Road initiative that inaugurated a
massive deep-water port in Peru last week.
Brazil has so far declined to
join the global infrastructure initiative, but hopes are high for other
industrial partnerships when Xi wraps up his stay in the country with a state
visit in Brasilia on Wednesday.
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