Qatar Tribune

Merkel declines Trump invite for in-person G7 summit

- AGENCIES

A German government spokesman has confirmed that Chancellor Angela Merkel will not attend an in-person summit of world leaders that President Donald Trump has suggested he will host in the United States despite concerns over the coronaviru­s.

Leaders from the G had been scheduled to meet by videoconfe­rence in late June after the pandemic scuttled plans to gather inperson at Camp David, the US presidenti­al retreat.

Trump last week, however, indicated that he could hold the huge gathering after all, “primarily at the White House” but also potentiall­y parts of it at Camp David, in Maryland state.

Merkel has declined, according to the spokesman.

“As of today, considerin­g the overall pandemic situation, she cannot agree to her personal participat­ion, to a journey to Washington,” the spokesman said, confirming an earlier report on the Politico website.

“The federal chancellor thanks President Trump for his invitation to the G summit,” he added.

The G is made up of the US, Italy, Japan, Canada, France, Germany and the United Kingdom, as well as the European Union. Member states take turns organising the annual gathering, with participan­ts normally sending large delegation­s with their leaders to the summits and journalist­s from the entire world convene to cover their meeting, as well.

The White House said it is putting the huge diplomatic gathering back on the agenda as a “show of strength” when global economies are gradually reemerging from lockdowns imposed to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

Merkel is the first to give a firm no, while other world leaders have expressed vaguely positive responses.

On Friday, the White House said Trump and British Prime Minister Boris Johnson had spoken and “agreed on the importance of convening the G in person in the near future”.

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who hosted the 2018 summit, said any in-person gathering would have to prioritise safety, while a French presidenti­al official said President Emmanuel Macron, last year’s host, was “willing to go to Camp David if the health conditions allow”.

European Council head Charles Michel, meanwhile, said through a spokesman that he would attend “if health conditions allow”.

The US is the worst-hit country for coronaviru­s infections, having registered more than 1, 45,000 cases and some 102,000 deaths.

 ??  ?? German Chancellor Angela Merkel
German Chancellor Angela Merkel

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