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■ TERRORISM, CLIMATE CHANGE DISCUSSED AT ECONOMIC LEADERS' SUMMIT

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel told leaders of the Group of 20 that millions of people are hoping they can help solve the world’s problems. She warned them that they must be prepared to make compromise­s. “We all know the big global challenges and we know that time is pressing,” Merkel said

German Chancellor Angela Merkel told leaders of the Group of 20 economic powers Friday that millions of people are hoping they can help solve the world’s problems, and warned them that they must be prepared to make compromise­s.

As the leaders discussed terrorism, trade and climate change, protests against their gathering continued in various parts of Hamburg. Anti-globalizat­ion activists set dozens of cars ablaze and protesters tried unsuccessf­ully to block leaders’ delegation­s from getting to the downtown convention center where the summit is being held.

Police ordered in several hundred more officers from across the country on Friday.

Inside the security cordon, Merkel’s prospects of finding common ground issues such as climate change and multilater­al trade looked uncertain at President Donald Trump’s first G-20 summit. Trump’s “America First” rhetoric and decision to withdraw from the Paris accord against climate change have caused widespread concern in Europe and beyond.

“There are of course millions of people following us with their concerns, their fears and their needs, who hope that we can make a contributi­on to solving the problems,” Merkel told fellow leaders at the start of a working lunch at which they were to discuss global growth and trade.

“I am absolutely sure that everyone will make an effort to achieve good results,” she added.

“We all know the big global challenges, and we know that time is pressing,” Merkel said. “So solutions can only be found if we are prepared to compromise ... without, and I say this clearly, bending ourselves too much out of shape. We can of course also name difference­s.”

Merkel noted that the countries at the summit represent two-thirds of the world population, four-fifths of the globe’s gross domestic product and three-quarters of world trade.

The G-20 comprises Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Germany, France, Britain, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Canada, South Korea, Mexico, Russia, Saudi Arabia, South Africa, Turkey, the United States and the European Union.

Also attending the summit are the Netherland­s, Norway, Spain, Guinea, Senegal, Singapore and Vietnam.

Before the summit, the leaders of China, India, Russia, Brazil and South Africa met and called for a more open global economy.

In a statement following their meeting, the so-called BRICS nations voiced support for a “rulesbased, transparen­t, non-discrimina­tory, open and inclusive multilater­al trading system” and emphasized the need for increasing “the voice and representa­tion” of emerging markets and developing countries in global economic and financial institutio­ns.

Speaking at the meeting, Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke against global trade restrictio­ns, saying that financial sanctions on a political pretext hurt mutual confidence and damage the global economy — an apparent reference to Western sanctions against Russia.

The BRICS leaders also urged the internatio­nal community to work jointly to implement the Paris climate agreement.

The summit, at which Trump was holding his first meeting with Putin, follows skirmishes Thursday evening between police and protesters at a demonstrat­ion in Germany’s second-biggest city that was expected to be the largest flashpoint around the summit.

Police said that at least 111 officers were hurt during those clashes, one of whom had to be taken to a hospital with an eye injury after a firework exploded in front of him. Twenty-nine people were arrested and another 15 temporaril­y detained.

On Friday, there were further incidents but nothing as intense as Thursday’s skirmishes.

Dozens of officers built moving lines in different parts of Hamburg and used water cannons to force away protesters from streets across the city. Some were physically moved for hundreds of meters (yards) from a protest sit-in in front of the first security checkpoint near the summit grounds.

None of the activists managed to push into the no-go zone around the summit that the police had establishe­d.

The city has boosted its police with reinforcem­ents from around the country and has 20,000 officers on hand to patrol Hamburg’s streets, skies and waterways.

We all know the big global challenges, and we know that time is pressing. ANGELA MERKEL Germany Chancellor

 ??  ?? PROTEST. Protesters are silhouette­d against a water cannon of the police during violent demonstrat­ions on the eve of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany. DPA VIA AP
PROTEST. Protesters are silhouette­d against a water cannon of the police during violent demonstrat­ions on the eve of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany. DPA VIA AP
 ?? AP FOTO ?? WELCOME. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, welcomes France’s President Emmanuel Macron upon arrival on the first day of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany.
AP FOTO WELCOME. German Chancellor Angela Merkel, right, welcomes France’s President Emmanuel Macron upon arrival on the first day of the G-20 summit in Hamburg, Germany.

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