Waterloo Region Record

Trudeau defends his G7 choices

Summit in Quebec’s Charlevoix region to cost an estimated $600 million

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

LA MALBAIE, QUE. — The importance of next month’s G7 summit in Quebec can’t be underestim­ated, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Thursday as he defended the event’s hefty price tag.

The event can be the perfect forum for the global leadership that is required on issues such as the environmen­t and healthy oceans and the improvemen­t of economic opportunit­ies for women internatio­nally, he told reporters.

“More than that, to have the opportunit­y for seven allies to gather in a less formal, more relaxed setting, surrounded by beautiful landscapes and a warm welcome, to talk about real issues — it’s extremely important,” Trudeau said at the Fairmont Le Manoir Richelieu hotel, which will host the summit.

Aside from Trudeau, the leaders of the United States, the United Kingdom, France, Germany, Japan and Italy will gather June 8-9 for the 44th annual conference in La Malbaie, about 140 kilometres northeast of Quebec City.

Canada holds the G7 rotating presidency for 2018 and has budgeted $600 million to cover the costs of summit-related events that are taking place throughout the year.

And as for why he chose Quebec’s Charlevoix region, Trudeau said he wanted to raise the profile of an area he remembers fondly from childhood and from visits with his wife and kids.

“I’ve had the chance to go to G7s around the world and to see to what point the president, the host, wanted to share pride in their country, people, citizens, and share what’s best about where they came from,” he said.

“It’s a chance to show something exceptiona­l about their country ... and my final decision was based on the welcome I knew we were going to have here.”

Hundreds of locals gathered the night before to meet Trudeau, who spent about 45 minutes taking photos, holding babies and talking to people.

“Having spent some time last night with a few hundred local citizens, their approach and expression of emotions around the G7 were almost entirely positive,” he said.

“People understand there will be security measures in place, but there is also a real sense of pride here. That we are welcoming the world to come and see how extraordin­ary and beautiful this region of Charlevoix is.”

Trudeau said he chose to highlight the theme of economic opportunit­y for women and girls during Canada’s G7 presidency.

All the summit-related meetings that take place will be done through a lens of how the issues being discussed also affect women and girls around the world, he said.

“It’s a profoundly economic argument, too,” Trudeau said. “To think about the direct impact our decisions and solutions have on women and girls ... it’s a way just to create better solutions.”

The G7 is also a chance to highlight the contributi­ons of Canada’s First Nations communitie­s, said Grand Chief Konrad Sioui of Wendake, near Quebec City.

Sioui met Trudeau earlier on Thursday along with other Quebec leaders involved in the G7 summit.

“We have lots to share from a cultural, tourism and economic developmen­t perspectiv­e,” Sioui said.

The grand chief added he wants the summit to be an opportunit­y for the world to see a different side of Canada’s First Nations communitie­s.

“We do abide by the principles of the G7, like equality between the genders, making sure the environmen­t is taken into considerat­ion — but also not being seen as a bunch of victims who are always at the mercy of different government­s,” he said.

Sioui said the G7 should serve as a platform to build relationsh­ips for trade with other nations.

“We want to take our rightful place,” he said.

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at roundtable ahead of the G7, Thursday, in La Malbaie Que. He is flanked by La Malbaie Mayor Michel Couturier, left, and Saint-Aime-des-Lacs Mayor Claire Gagnon.
JACQUES BOISSINOT THE CANADIAN PRESS Prime Minister Justin Trudeau speaks at roundtable ahead of the G7, Thursday, in La Malbaie Que. He is flanked by La Malbaie Mayor Michel Couturier, left, and Saint-Aime-des-Lacs Mayor Claire Gagnon.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada