Deutsche Welle (English edition)

G7 final communique calls for new COVID origin probe, pledges 1 billion vaccines — as it happened

On the final day of the summit in Cornwall, England, G7 leaders made pledges on tackling the coronaviru­s pandemic, addressing climate change, human rights issues and endorsing a global minimum tax.

-

G7 leaders pledge to reach net-zero carbon emissions by 2050

The group announces new green-financing initiative­s for poorer countries

Merkel says task force hopes to firm up infrastruc­ture project plans by next year

A joint communique backed up an earlier pledge to donate 1 billion COVID vaccines

These live updates are now closed. To read more on how the three-day event unfolded please click here.

Health and environmen­t campaigner­s slam G7 pledges

Criticism from health and environmen­t campaigner­s followed the release of the final G7 communique.

"This G7 summit will live on in infamy," said Max Lawson, the head of inequality policy at internatio­nal aid group Oxfam.

"Faced with the biggest health emergency in a century and a climate catastroph­e that is destroying our planet, they have completely failed to meet the challenges of our times."

Campaigner­s also complained that the G7 failed to go into details about how it will pay for a newly agreed "Nature Compact" — aimed to protect 30% of the world's land and oceans from further destructio­n by 2030.

Additional­ly, the 1 billion coronaviru­s vaccine doses for poorer countries falls far short of the 11 billion doses the World Health Organizati­on said is needed to vaccinate at least 70% of the world's population and truly end the pandemic.

Former British prime minister Gordon Brown said the lack of a more ambitious vaccinatio­n plan was "an unforgivab­le moral failure."

Internatio­nal Olympic Committee (IOC) president Thomas Bach meanwhile thanked "G7 leaders for their support" for the Tokyo games that were postponed for a year due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

"We take this as a great encouragem­ent to deliver safe and secure Olympic and Paralympic Games Tokyo 2020 for everybody in this spirit of worldwide solidarity," Bach said.

Bidens meet UK's Queen Elizabeth II

US President Joe Biden and First Lady Jill Biden visited the United Kingdom's Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle, following the end of the three-day G7 summit.

The Bidens emerged from a Land Rover on Sunday to meet the awaiting queen before inspecting the Guard of Honor assembled on the castle grounds.

The queen and the US first lady stayed on a dais as Biden walked along the guard. Once Sunday's inspection was completed, the queen and the Bidens headed into the castle for tea.

Following the visit, Biden said "I don't think she'll be insulted, but she reminded me of my mother."

G7 leaders welcome a US comeback

US President Joe Biden said his fellow leaders agreed that "America is back at the table and fully engaged," following a period of "America First" protection­ist policy under former president Donald Trump.

Here's a roundup G7 leaders' comments on Biden at the summit.

A "big breath of fresh air" is how British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, host of the summit in southwest England, described Biden, He told reporters Sunday that the G7 stood united anew in its "democratic values."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel, attending her last G7 in the post, meanwhile said Biden had brought "new momentum" to resolving the world's problems at the three-day summit.

French President Emmanuel Macron told reporters that it was a relief that he was now working with an American president who he termed was "willing to cooperate."

"What you demonstrat­e is leadership is partnershi­p," Macron said of Biden.

Macron and Biden appeared to have built up quick chemistry during the in-person summit. The two draped their arms around each other and chatted animatedly when they walked together after the leaders' photo on Friday.

Biden wraps up G7 conference

US President Joe Biden said democracie­s were "in a contest with autocratic government­s around the world" in his final address at the G7 conference.

"We're in a contest, not with China per se, ... with autocrats, autocratic government­s around the world, as to whether or not democracie­s can compete with them in a rapidly changing 21st century," said Biden.

He indicated Russia had its own problems to "chew on," saying its president, Vladimir Putin, had not changed.

"Let me make it clear I think he's right it's a low point, and it depends on how he responds to acting consistent with internatio­nal norms, which in many cases he has not," Biden told reporters.

The US president also stressed that his country was making a comeback in internatio­nal diplomacy, following Trump.

"America's back in the business of leading the world alongside nations who share our most deeply held values,'' Biden said, before leaving Cornwall to visit Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle. "I think we've made progress in reestablis­hing American credibilit­y among our closest friends."

Biden said he does not view NATO as a "protection racket." Trump had often criticized European member states for what he viewed as too low financial contributi­ons to the organizati­on.

Biden also reported that global leaders were gratified that he accepted the science of climate change: "One of the things some of my colleagues said to me when I was there was, 'Well, the United States' leadership recognizes there is global warming,''' Biden said.

Final communique released The final communique from the G7 meeting has been released to some media outlets.

The document covers several topics

On the coronaviru­s, the document:

Calls for an inquiry into the origins of the coronaviru­s

Commits to delivering at least 1 billion coronaviru­s vaccine doses over the next year.

Reiterates support for holding the Olympic and Paralympic games

On climate change and environmen­t it:

Recognizes climate change and inequality as a growing threat to the global economy

Reiterates pledge to drop fossil fuel subsidies by 2025

Commits to protecting swathes of land and ocean over this decade

Pledges to meet $100 billion a year overdue funding to help poorer countries tackle climate change

On Russia, the document: Calls on Russia to hold domestic hackers to account

Calls on Russia to stop its destablizi­ng activities

On other human rights issues,

it:

Condemns Belarusian human rights abuses

Calls for a cessation of conflict in Ethiopia's Tigray region

Expresses concern about the use of forced labor in supply chains

Pledges $2.75 million to help educate 40 million girls

On China, it:

Calls on China to respect human rights, especially in Xinjiang province

Expresses concern for the situation in the South China Sea

Commits to working together to challenge China's "nonmarket economic practices" On global economic issues, it: Endorses a global minimum tax on multinatio­nal corporatio­ns to stop tax avoidance

Plans to build upon the $12 trillion support for global economies after the pandemic

China must 'respect human rights'

G7 leaders said in their draft communique that China must respect human rights in Xinjiang as well as allow Hong Kong freedoms. The group also expressed concern over what it called Beijing's growing influence in the East and South China Seas, and in the Taiwan Strait.

"We will promote our values, including by calling on China to respect human rights and fundamenta­l freedoms, especially in relation to Xinjiang and those rights, freedoms and high degree of autonomy for Hong Kong enshrined in the Sino-British Joint Declaratio­n," the G7 said in the communique that was almost finalized.

Leaders also expressed concern over forced labor in China.

"The United States and our G7 partners remain deeply concerned by the use of all forms of forced labor in global supply chains, including state-sponsored forced labor of vulnerable groups and minorities and supply chains of the agricultur­al,

solar, and garment sectors — the main supply chains of concern in Xinjiang," the document said.

Mobilizing financial support

DW correspond­ent Alexandra von Nahmen says G7 leaders have agreed to increase their financial support "to make sure that they will be able to mobilize €100 billion for poorer nations to cope with the coincidenc­es of climate change and to help them switch to clean energy."

"However, this promise was already made a decade ago and so far the leaders have not managed to live up to their promises," von Nahmen told DW. Therefore, they are "now saying they are definitely going to increase financial spending," she added.

Study on COVID origins

G7 leaders called for a transparen­t, science-based study into the origins of COVID-19 convened by the World Health Organizati­on, according to the draft communique.

"We call for a timely, transparen­t, expert-led, and sciencebas­ed WHO-convened Phase 2 COVID-19 Origins study including, as recommende­d by the experts’ report, in China," it said.

Merkel on vaccines and infrastruc­ture projects

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said she hopes that a new G7 task force can present details of the first infrastruc­ture projects in developing countries in 2022.

She also said that 2.3 billion COVID-19 vaccine doses should be distribute­d to low-income countries by the end of next year.

"Germany is responsibl­e for 350 million doses," Merkel said. That includes 30 million doses that Germany had ordered and would distribute, she said. "That will probably be more over time."

The G7 group has "agreed that the pandemic can only be defeated globally," she said. "The way out of the pandemic is vaccines," she stressed.

Speaking about coal, for which the G7 leaders are facing pressure to phase out state subsidies, Merkel said the delegates had not agreed on a date for ending the use of the fossil fuel.

South African leader joins summit

South African President Cyril

 ??  ?? US President Joe Biden and US First Lady Jill Biden headed to Windsor Castle to meet the British monarch
US President Joe Biden and US First Lady Jill Biden headed to Windsor Castle to meet the British monarch
 ??  ?? World leaders meet the Queen of England at the G7 conference in Cornwall
World leaders meet the Queen of England at the G7 conference in Cornwall

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany