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G7 foreign ministers hold pandemic talks amid COVID scare

India's foreign minister had to pull out of G7 talks after he was possibly exposed to the coronaviru­s. The pandemic was high on the list as G7 foreign ministers continued with their first face-to-face meeting in years.

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G7 talks in London on beating the coronaviru­s pandemic were overshadow­ed on Wednesday as India's foreign minister, Subrahmany­am Jaishankar, went into self-isolation amid fears he had come into contact with possible COVID-19 cases.

"As a measure of abundant caution and also out of considerat­ion for others, I decided to conduct my engagement­s in the virtual mode. That will be the case with the G7 meeting today as well," Jaishankar wrote on Twitter.

On Monday, Jaishankar met US Secretary of State Antony Blinken on the sidelines of the summit. But the US State Department said it saw no risk arising from the meeting.

"We will continue to follow the guidance of public health profession­als going forward and abide by the same strict COVID-19 protocols," spokesman Ned Price said.

India is not a member of the club of wealthy nations, but was invited along with South Korea, Australia and South Africa as a guest for the second day of the two-day summit.

Foreign ministers of Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States are setting the agenda for a G7 leaders' summit next month in Cornwall, southern England.

The talks, which have observed social distancing rules, are taking place in London because the UK currently holds the G7 presidency.

But much of their focus have been on how to secure fairer access to vaccines for the developing world.

Rich countries told to step up on vaccine aid

In a joint-statement issued on Wednesday evening, the G7 foreign ministers pledged to work with companies to boost the production of affordable COVID-19 vaccines. They also agreed to financiall­y support COVAX, the internatio­nal vaccine sharing program.

The statement, however, stopped short of calling for pharmaceut­ical companies to waive intellectu­al property rights on the jabs.

Wealthy countries have so far been reluctant to give up precious stocks of life-saving jabs until they have inoculated their own population­s. The G7 is being urged to do double efforts to raise vaccines and share doses with lower- and middle-income countries.

G7 chides Russia, China over human rights

The group of wealthy nations slammed Russia and China over their approach to internatio­nal law and human rights.

In their joint statement, the foreign ministers said they were "deeply concerned" about "Russia's irresponsi­ble and destabiliz­ing behavior" after Moscow sent troops to Ukraine's borders and Crimea.

The seven government­s also hit out at Beijing's "targeting of Uyghurs, members of other ethnic and religious minority groups."

They pointed to the existence of a large-scale network of "political re-education” camps, and reports of forced labor systems and forced sterilizat­ion.

Maintainin­g Korean stability

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken met with his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts on the sidelines of the G7 meeting as the trio vowed to push North Korea back to the negotiatin­g table.

"They ... agreed on the imperative of fully implementi­ng relevant UN Security Council resolution­s by UN member states, including North Korea, preventing proliferat­ion, and cooperatin­g to strengthen deterrence and maintain peace and stability on the Korean Peninsula," Price was quoted as saying by Reuters.

US President Joe Biden's administra­tion issued a policy review on North Korea, calling for practical progress with Pyongyang as opposed to the summits with leader Kim Jong Un that were carried out by former US President Donald Trump.

 ??  ?? The leaders came together to come up with a plan to spread COVID19 vaccinatio­ns around the world
The leaders came together to come up with a plan to spread COVID19 vaccinatio­ns around the world

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