The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

G20 foreign ministers meeting shows gap in intl cooperatio­n

- By Minako Sasako and Keita Ikeda Yomiuri Shimbun Correspond­ents

MATERA, Italy /LONDON — The Group of 20 foreign ministers have confirmed the need to work together for further recovery from the novel coronaviru­s pandemic at a meeting in Italy, but prospects for cooperatio­n are grim due to sharp difference­s over certain issues among major countries. After the meeting, U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken posted on Twitter, “Multilater­alism is our best tool for tackling the global challenges we face.”

Foreign ministers of other countries also pressed the need for multilater­al cooperatio­n at press conference­s and on other occasions. The ministers made remarks such as cooperatio­n among a wide range of countries is essential to solving cross-border issues such as infectious diseases and climate change.

Consisting of regional powers and emerging economies, the G20 plays a key role in leading the global economy. However, unlike the Group of Seven, whose industrial­ized member states share democratic values, the G20 includes countries under ironfisted rule, making consensus-building difficult.

Under such circumstan­ces, concrete consensus-building was limited to areas in which G20 members can find it easier to cooperate, such as eradicatin­g hunger, at the latest G20 foreign ministers meeting.

However, the United States and China were already at loggerhead­s.

Ahead of the meeting, the U.S. State Department implicitly criticized China by releasing a statement that said, “A multilater­al vision for advancing the rules-based internatio­nal order must be based on internatio­nal law and support for democracy and human rights.”

In contrast, Chinese State Councilor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, who attended the G20 meeting online, said, “Multilater­alism is not a high-sounding slogan, still less a facade for unilateral­ism.”

This remark was apparently a rebuke to the United States and other countries that have imposed sanctions against Beijing over human rights issues in China.

The confrontat­ion between the democratic camp, including the United States and European countries, and the authoritar­ian camp, including China and Russia, is intensifyi­ng over how much importance to

*Based on lists of countries that supported Canada’s statement made at a U.N. Human Rights Council session in June and countries and regions in favor of Cuba’s stance defending China at a council session in March.

place on the rule of law and human rights in creating a post-pandemic internatio­nal order. (July 2)

64 MEMBERS SUPPORT CHINA

By Kentaro Sugino

Yomiuri Shimbun Correspond­ent

GENEVA — Assertions by Group of Seven countries, which emphasize democracy and respect for human rights, are sometimes met with opposition from a number of countries at the United Nations and other forums.

During a session of the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva on June 22, Canada, a G7 member state, expressed concern about the human rights situation in China’s Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, Hong Kong and Tibet. Forty-four countries, including Japan, the United States, Australia and European countries, sided with Canada.

However, Belarus, whose government has been criticized by the West for its suppressio­n of domestic opposition, delivered a speech at the session “on behalf of 64 countries and regions,” defending China’s stance on human rights issues. The representa­tives of Belarus said that issues in Hong Kong, Xinjiang and Tibet are China’s internal affairs.

The names of the 64 countries and regions were not disclosed. However, Cuba made a similar speech in favor of China on behalf of 64 countries and regions at a session of the U.N. council in March. According to the council’s secretaria­t, half of the 64 countries and regions were African nations, including Ethiopia and Egypt. (July 2)

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