Arab Times

China hits back as G7 opens in Japan

‘Group should mind its own business’

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ISE-SHIMA, Japan, May 26, (AFP): World leaders on Thursday kicked off talks dominated by the global economy and worries over China’s growing clout — and were told by Beijing to keep their noses out of its business.

Presidents and prime ministers from the Group of Seven rich nations are huddling in Japan for two days of discussion­s focused on how to stoke demand and encourage growth.

But China’s growing assertiven­ess, particular­ly in bitter territoria­l disputes in the South China Sea was providing ever-louder background music, with European Council President Donald Tusk saying the group needed to take a “tough stance” on the hot-button issue.

Beijing swiftly launched a stinging broadside against the G7 — Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the US — which it said should not pursue “selfish interests”.

“G7 should focus on its own duties, that is economic cooperatio­n, it should not point fingers at something outside its portfolio,” Chinese foreign ministry spokeswoma­n Hua Chunying said at a regular briefing in Beijing.

The Xinhua news agency, Beijing’s official mouthpiece, reinforced the point with a blunt commentary that said the group “should mind its own business” and accused Japan of exploiting its host status to try to isolate China.

Both Washington and Tokyo — which is locked in a separate dispute with Beijing over islands in the East China Sea — have warned against China stoking tensions in the contested waters.

Beijing’s rebuke came as the G7 opened its 2016 summit at Ise-Shima, a mountainou­s region about 300 km (200 miles) southwest of Tokyo.

Leaders, including US President Barack Obama — who is making a historic trip to the atomic-bombed city of Hiroshima on Friday — visited Ise Jingu, a shrine complex that sits at the spiritual heart of Japan’s native Shintoism.

Abe’s decision to take his counterpar­ts to the site — also a hotspot for domestic tourists — has raised eyebrows among some critics, however, who say Shinto retains some of the nationalis­t overtones with which it was imbued when it was the state religion.

After a working lunch, several of the G7 leaders — including summit heartthrob­s Matteo Renzi of Italy and Justin Trudeau of Canada — got to grips with high-tech cars.

However their very low-key demonstrat­ion seemed chiefly to consist of being driven at low speed around a car park.

Several bilateral meetings were expected throughout the day, with Trudeau lined up to meet Germany’s Angela Merkel and French leader Francois Hollande.

The sputtering global economy was centre stage in formal talks, although divisions are likely to remain over whether the world should spend or save its way out of the malaise, with Japan and Germany at odds on the issue.

The global refugee crisis was also a feature on the group’s packed schedule.

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