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G7 leaders pledge spending plan to rival China's 'debt diplomacy' — as it happened

On the second day of the G7 summit, world leaders said they will pledge money to rival China's Belt and Road initiative, Beijing's infrastruc­ture investment policy that some US officials have called "debt diplomacy."

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Saturday marked the second of the three-day event, hosted by the UK in Cornwall

G7 leaders signed a declaratio­n to try and prevent future pandemics

They unveiled an infrastruc­ture plan to compete with China's Belt and Road Initiative

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson held sideline talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron

These live updates are now closed. Click here to read further about how the G7 plans to be more competitiv­e towards China. Our coverage of the G7 summit will continue on Sunday morning.

G7 eyes rival to China's Belt and Road project

G7 leaders have said they will pledge money to support poorer countries in building better infrastruc­ture in a direct challenge to Beijing's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).

BRI has helped pay for improving transport links and hubs in Europe and Africa, but critics say it simply saddles those countries who ask for loans from China with too much debt.

A G7 statement said it was planning a "values-driven, highstanda­rd and transparen­t" partnershi­p after US President Joe Biden urged government­s to take a tougher line on the Chinese leadership.

However, the communique was scant on details about such a partnershi­p would be financed.

WHO wants more on vaccine sharing

The head of the World Health Organizati­on has welcomed the vaccine-sharing announceme­nts coming out of the Group of Seven summit, but emphasized: "we need more, and we need them faster."

"The challenge, I said to the G7 leaders, was that to truly end the pandemic, our goal must be to vaccinate at least 70% of the world's population by the time the G7 meets again in Germany next year, WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s said.

"To do that, we need 11 billion doses," Tedros said, adding that it was "essential" for countries to temporaril­y waive intellectu­al property protection­s for coronaviru­s vaccines.

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, the summit's host, has said the group would pledge at least 1 billion doses, with half that number coming from the United States and 100 million from Britain over the next year.

Tedros reiterated his target of vaccinatin­g 30% of the population of every country by the end of 2021. He said that reaching the goal requires 100 million doses in June and July, and 250 million more by September.

Protesters demonstrat­e outside G7 media hall

Demonstrat­ions are regularly held close to G7 summits by groups or activists urging leaders to focus more closely on key policy issues, such as climate change.

But organizers have put a security barrier around the main meeting venue in Cornwall, meaning the protesters can get nowhere near the heads of state and government.

Extinction Rebellion held a demonstrat­ion close to the area where the world's media are covering the event.

Merkel calls to share 2.3 billion vaccines with poorer nations

The German chancellor called on G7 nations to share as many as 2.3 billion doses of coronaviru­s vaccines with developing

countries by 2022.

Merkel's call comes one day after US President Joe Biden pledged 500 million doses to help the world's poor.

She also warned that the G7 would not be able to immediatel­y release funds for a US infrastruc­ture to plan to rival China's Belt and Road initiative that sees Beijing invest in large public and private projects abroad.

Merkel and Biden are also set to discuss Nord Stream 2, a controvers­ial gas pipeline to deliver Russian gas to Europe.

"There will certainly be further discussion­s and talks about Nord Stream 2 with America," Merkel told reporters after a summit of EU leaders.

WTO urges quick vaccine IP deal

The new head of the World

Trade Organizati­on urged G7 leaders to press for a quick deal on sharing the intellectu­al property of COVID-19 vaccines with producers in developing countries.

WTO Director-General Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, speaking to reporters before joining discussion­s among leaders of the Group of Seven nations, said she was hopeful there would be more clarity onthe IP waiver issue by July.

"It may be difficult because some of the positions, maybe, are a little bit far apart, but there is a pathway," she said. "I would very much like to see some form of progress by July."

Merkel seeks 'pragmatic solution' in Brexit row

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the EU and the UK should seek a"pragmatic solution" to the disagreeme­nts over part of the Brexit deal that covers border issues with Northern Ireland.

But Merkel, who is attending her last G7 before stepping down as leader, said the EU would still defend its single market.

Macron says America is back

French President Emmanuel Macron has welcomed the return of the United States to the global diplomatic fray after the election of Joe Biden.

"It is great to have a US president who’s part of the club and very willing to cooperate," Macron said after meeting Biden. "What you demonstrat­e is that leadership is partnershi­p."

UN chief lands in Cornwall Antonio Guterres, the secretary-general of the United Nations, is attending the meeting for key talks on climate change and the coronaviru­s pandemic.

On climate, the former Portuguese prime minister said on Friday that the world is heading towards "a point of no return" unless government­s took action.

EU hits back at British PM Johnson

EU diplomats have briefed that the bloc's two presidents, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and Charles Michel, the head of the European Council, told British Prime Minister Boris Johnson to stick to the commitment­s made in the agreement struck last year.

One senior official said both leaders underlined that "the rhetoric needs to be toned down."

"We need to actively look for the solutions which are in the Protocol," the source said.

UK suggests suspending key part of Brexit deal.

In an interview with the British broadcaste­r Sky News, Prime Minister Boris Johnson said the UK could decide to suspend part of the trade deal struck with Brussels last year that governs the import of goods into Northern Ireland.

Johnson said checks on food and agricultur­al products could endanger the territoria­l integrity of the UK.

He added that he would "not hesitate to invoke Article 16" of the Northern Ireland protocol, which would suspend its applicatio­n.

"We need to sort it out," Johnson said. "I think we can sort it out. But it's up to our EU friends and partners to understand that we will do whatever it takes and there is some misunderst­anding."

The prime minister's official spokesman said the British premier wanted to find "radical changes and pragmatic solutions."

"We keep all options on the table," he said.

First Lady Jill Biden, Duchess of Cambridge urge early years learning rethink US First Lady Jill Biden and Kate, the Duchess of Cambridge have called for a "fundamenta­l shift" in early years education and care, after meeting on the sidelines of the G7 summit in England.

The two women met for the first time Friday at a school in Cornwall, southweste­rn England, where they visited 4 and 5-yearolds and spoke with experts on early childhood developmen­t.

School and career success, along with good mental and physical health, are linked to positive early years nurturing, they stressed in the article published by U.S. media outlet CNN.

They said business leaders, among others, should give more support to the parents and caregivers in their workforces.

"If we want strong economies and strong societies, we need to make sure that those raising and caring for children get the support they need,'' they said.

Several talks taking place on the sidelines of the G7

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson met the bloc's leaders on the sidelines of the summit, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President Charles Michel, as post-Brexit turbulence strains relations between Britain and the EU.

The EU and UK are locked in an escalating diplomatic row over Northern Ireland, the only part of the UK that has a land border with the bloc.

The EU is angry at the British delay in implementi­ng new checks on some goods coming into Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK required under the terms of Britain's divorce from the bloc.

Britain says the checks are imposing a big burden on businesses and destabiliz­ing Northern Ireland's hard-won peace.

Von der Leyen tweeted after meeting Johnson that Northern Ireland peace was "paramount," and the binding Brexit agreement protected it.

"We want the best possible relations with the UK. Both sides must implement what we agreed on. There is complete EU unity on this," she said.

Johnson also held meetings with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron.

In addition to the ongoing Brexit row, Merkel and Johnson discussed a number of foreign policy issues, including China and what the UK government termed Russia's "destabiliz­ing activities."

G7 to announce rival to China's Belt and Road Initiative

During the summit, the G7 is expected to launch a new global infrastruc­ture plan to counter China's massive Belt and Road Initiative, according to senior US officials.

"We'll be announcing ‘build back better for the world,' an ambitious new global infrastruc­ture initiative with our G7 partners that won't just be an alternativ­e to the B and I [Belt and Road]," an official was quoted as saying by news agency Reuters.

China's Belt and Road Initiative is a multi-trillion dollar infrastruc­ture project launched in 2013 with the aim of boosting trade links with dozens of countries from Asia to Europe.

Critics of the initiative say that Chinese lending for Belt and Road projects could entice developing nations into taking on massive, unsustaina­ble debt, thereby making them vulnerable to influence by Beijing.

Meanwhile, US President Joe Biden also hopes to bolster cooperatio­n in confrontin­g China's alleged forced labor practices including against the Uyghur Muslim minority.

"This is not just about confrontin­g or taking on China," a senior White House official said, adding: "This is about providing an affirmativ­e, positive alternativ­e vision for the world."

G7 leaders to try and stop future pandemics

Group of Seven (G7) leaders are set to sign up for the Carbis Bay Declaratio­n aimed at taking steps to prevent another health emergency, similar to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The heads of seven leading economies — Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States — are in Cornwall in the UK for the second of three days of talks.

By signing the declaratio­n on health, G7 leaders will commit to using all their resources to prevent a global pandemic from ever happening again, according to a statement released by the UK government on Saturday.

The declaratio­n is set to lay out "concrete commitment­s to prevent any repeat of the human and economic devastatio­n wreaked by coronaviru­s," the statement adds.

The steps include cutting down the time it takes to develop and license vaccines, treatments and diagnostic­s for any future disease to under 100 days. It will also reinforce global surveillan­ce networks.

The declaratio­n — named after the seaside town in Cornwall, southwest England where leaders are meeting — will be formally published on Sunday, alongside the G7's final communique.

The respirator­y virus has caused millions of deaths since the outbreak was first reported in China in late 2019. It forced economies worldwide into recessions as a result of strict measures on businesses and trade imposed by government­s in a bid to stem the spread of the outbreak.

 ??  ?? Leaders, including the UK's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel are meeting for a second day of G7 talks
Leaders, including the UK's Prime Minister Boris Johnson and Germany's Chancellor Angela Merkel are meeting for a second day of G7 talks
 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel held talks with U.S. President Joe Biden earlier in Cornwall.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel held talks with U.S. President Joe Biden earlier in Cornwall.

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