Montreal Gazette

Summit provides PM chance to tout ideas

Trudeau to lead Canadian delegation

- JOANNA SMITH

• The Liberal government views the summit of la Francophon­ie as an opportunit­y to get the world talking about troubles and solutions, while showcasing Canada’s ideas on how to address them.

“I look forward to building new ties with francophon­e countries around the world and working closely to tackle the challenges we collective­ly face,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a statement last week.

Trudeau is leading the Canadian delegation to this year’s summit of the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of la Francophon­ie in Antananari­vo, Madagascar, which, after a day in Liberia, is the second and final stop on his first visit to Africa since the Liberals came to power.

The internatio­nal gathering tends to get less attention than some others, but the absence of major players like the United States and China also allows Canada — whose $43 million in annual funding to la Francophon­ie and its offshoots makes it the second-largest contributo­r after France — a chance to wield some influence.

It could also be a chance to forge new relationsh­ips at a time when the coming accession of Donald Trump to the American presidency is bringing uncertaint­y and upheaval to the world stage, especially on issues of internatio­nal trade and efforts to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

Trudeau will be one of several government representa­tives who will speak at the opening ceremonies Saturday morning, a short address that officials say will mention climate change, the role that women and girls should play in developmen­t assistance and support Ontario’s bid to join la Francophon­ie as an observer.

Trudeau is also expected to talk about human rights, including those of LGBTQ people, even though some of the delegates in the audience represent countries where homosexual activity is still illegal.

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard, meanwhile, is not closing the door to Saudi Arabia’s bid for observer status at la Francophon­ie, a decision that must be approved by consensus.

Couillard would not comment Friday on his position, but said he has some reservatio­ns, given that Saudi blogger Raif Badawi, whose wife and children live in Sherbrooke, Que., remains imprisoned under the threat of lashings in that country.

Cameron Ahmad, spokesman for Trudeau, said it is unlikely the issue will end up being debated at the summit, because the gathering of ministers of la Francophon­ie ahead of the summit found Saudi Arabia’s submission was incomplete.

The summit will also give Canada the chance to highlight its internatio­nal developmen­t priorities in a forum where 31 of the 80 members and observer states are from Africa, including countries on the list of possible destinatio­ns for Canada’s promised contributi­on of up to 600 troops to a United Nations peacekeepi­ng mission.

“It is really a place in the world where our efforts and our priorities are really set to make a difference,” Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau said in a recent interview.

One of those priorities is gender equality and the empowermen­t of women and girls, a message that could get a boost from the fact that Michaëlle Jean, the former governor general, is the first female — and the first Canadian — to lead the organizati­on.

Canada is sponsoring a joint resolution with Benin on early and forced marriages, a cause that former prime minister Stephen Harper also took up in his speech to the last summit of la Francophon­ie in Dakar, Senegal two years ago as part of his signature maternal, child and newborn health initiative.

Trudeau has promised that any funding for women’s health initiative­s in developing countries would include abortion services, something the previous Conservati­ve government excluded.

The post-meeting Antananari­vo Declaratio­n is expected to include language on security, as many members of la Francophon­ie are both sources and targets of terrorism and the criminal traffickin­g of drugs, arms and humans that sustain it.

Quebec is putting forward a resolution on fighting and preventing radicaliza­tion that leads to violence.

Climate change is also expected to feature prominentl­y in the discussion­s.

The setting is apt. Madagascar, a country with some of the greatest biodiversi­ty on the planet, has lost the majority of its rainforest to logging and agricultur­al practices. It is also experienci­ng recurrent drought in the south that has left 1.2 million people grappling with food insecurity.

I LOOK FORWARD TO BUILDING NEW TIES WITH FRANCOPHON­E COUNTRIES.

 ?? GIANLUIGI GUERCIA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES ?? The federal Liberal government’s priorities of gender equality and empowermen­t of women could get a boost from Michaëlle Jean, who leads La Francophon­ie.
GIANLUIGI GUERCIA / AFP / GETTY IMAGES The federal Liberal government’s priorities of gender equality and empowermen­t of women could get a boost from Michaëlle Jean, who leads La Francophon­ie.

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