Muscat Daily

COVID-19 PANDEMIC G20 leaders urge greater global cooperatio­n to fight COVID crisis

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Matera, Italy - G20 ministers led by the United States said on Tuesday that the coronaviru­s pandemic showed the need for greater global cooperatio­n, as African nations sought help to develop their medical infrastruc­ture.

In a sharp reversal from the previous US administra­tion, Secretary of State Antony Blinken emphasised the need for multilater­al institutio­ns as foreign ministers from the Group of 20 major economies met in the ancient Italian city of Matera.

“Multilater­al cooperatio­n will be key to our collective ability to stop this global health crisis,” said Blinken, winding down a week-long trip to Europe.

“That’s also true for the work we must do to strengthen global health security moving forward so we can detect, prevent and respond better to future health emergencie­s.”

Blinken pointed to US contributi­ons to COVAX, the UNbacked initiative that aims to vaccinate low-income countries, including President Joe Biden’s promise to provide 500mn Pfizer doses.

Italian Foreign Minister Luigi

Di Maio, the host of the talks, said that the pandemic, which has hit his country particular­ly hard, exposed global vulnerabil­ities.

“Multi-lateralism and cooperatio­n are fundamenta­l in responding to global challenges,” he said.

Foreign Minister Christophe Lutundula of the Democratic Republic of Congo, participat­ing as part of an Italian push to involve African nations in G20 talks, warned that coronaviru­s was far from over in his continent and called for urgent measures.

In addition to immediate aid, he called for the G20 to back the capacity of developing countries to produce vaccines themselves and to help launch a continentw­ide agency that will encourage scientific cooperatio­n.

The G20 must help ‘concretely and in detail so we move beyond speeches to urgent action on the ground’, he said.

Such cooperatio­n ‘will help African countries counter the shock of COVID and revive their economies for the greater good of the internatio­nal community’, he said.

The talks will prepare for a G20 leaders’ meeting in October

in Rome that is expected to see the first summit between US President Joe Biden and his Chinese counterpar­t Xi Jinping amid soaring tensions between the world’s two largest economies.

With China participat­ing virtually in Matera, Tuesday’s conference was focused more on general themes but marked a major US shift following the defeat of former president Donald Trump, who belittled internatio­nal institutio­ns as part of his ‘America First’ philosophy.

 ?? (AFP) ?? The G20 foreign and developmen­t ministers begin their meeting in Matera, in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy on Tuesday
(AFP) The G20 foreign and developmen­t ministers begin their meeting in Matera, in the region of Basilicata, in southern Italy on Tuesday

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