Sabtu, 12 Juni 2021

G7 set to agree 'green belt and road' plan to tackle China's influence - Financial Times

Leaders of the G7 leading western economies will on Sunday back a western rival to China’s “belt and road” initiative, in a plan to mobilise billions of dollars to help developing countries tackle climate change.

Joe Biden has been leading calls to offer poor countries a new source of infrastructure finance, providing a “democratic” alternative to Chinese loans, which are seen in the west as a tool to spread Beijing’s influence.

The G7 summit in Cornwall will agree what allies of Boris Johnson, the summit host, call a “green belt and road” plan, with richer countries helping fund schemes that reduce carbon emissions.

Johnson wants to focus on supporting green initiatives and has been wary of presenting the initiative as an “anti-China” move. British officials say they want the G7 to “show what we are for, not who we are against”.

But the White House favours a wider package of infrastructure support and is explicit about wanting to provide a new counterweight to China’s influence.

“We have a slightly narrower focus,” said one British official.

On Saturday G7 leaders held talks to co-ordinate China strategy. “There was broad agreement that we should co-operate with Beijing on things like fighting climate change, compete in areas like global supply chains and contest on issues like human rights,” said one official briefed on the talks.

The “Build Back Better for the World” plan will grant countries improved access to financing for low-carbon projects such as wind farms and railways.

The plan aims to boost climate funding from multilateral development banks as well as the private sector, and was billed as a “Green Marshall Plan” by some officials, but at a smaller scale.

G7 leaders are expected to commit to increase their contributions to international climate finance to meet the pre-existing target of mobilising $100bn a year from rich countries, to help poor countries support green growth.

However one official watching the discussions said: “It was a short on detail on how this would be achieved.”

A senior US official said on Friday: “The United States and many of our partners and friends around the world have long been sceptical about China’s Belt and Road Initiative. 

“We’ve seen the Chinese government demonstrate a lack of transparency, poor environmental and labour standards, and a course of approach that’s left many countries worse off. 

“But until now, we haven’t offered a positive alternative that reflects our values, our standards, and our way of doing business.”

Environmental groups criticised the lack of detail of how the plan would be financed and operate, leading some to warn it was no more than empty promises. 

Climate change is one of the key priorities for G7 leaders at the summit, but leaders are struggling to agree on finance. Only Germany, Canada, Japan and Italy are expected to announce new climate funding in Cornwall. 

The G7 leaders will pledge to phase out petrol and diesel cars, and to shut down all coal plants that do not use emissions-capturing technology as soon as possible. They will also pledge to protect 30 per cent of the planet’s land and ocean by 2030.

With the UK hosting the COP26 climate summit in November, this weekend’s summit in Cornwall is expected to offer a preview of how the world’s largest industrialised democracies will approach the climate crisis in the international arena. 

Several climate groups were unimpressed, saying the Build Back Better plan appeared vague and weak.

“We still don’t know the timeline or the scale of these announcements, and without that, these are just empty promises,” said Catherine Pettengell, interim head of Climate Action Network UK. 

People familiar with the process said the UK was relatively late in trying to pull together its green infrastructure plan. One official watching Saturday’s G7 deliberations said Johnson on one occasion seemed to mix up the names of various schemes.

Johnson said: “The G7 has an unprecedented opportunity to drive a global green industrial revolution, with the potential to transform the way we live.”

All G7 countries have committed to reaching net-zero carbon emissions by 2050, making climate policies an area of broad agreement. But differences over issues such as coal and climate finance donations have nonetheless made for difficult negotiations over the final language of the leaders communique.

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2021-06-12 21:33:47Z
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G7 leaders attempt to rival China with infrastructure project - Al Jazeera English

The Group of Seven (G7) nations have unveiled a significant infrastructure initiative for lower-income countries in a bid to counter China’s multitrillion-dollar Belt and Road Initiative, dubbed the “New Silk Road”.

Promising to “collectively catalyse” hundreds of billions in infrastructure investments for low- and middle-income countries, the G7 leaders said on Saturday that they would offer a “values-driven, high-standard and transparent” partnership.

The announcement was made as the leaders of the G7 countries – the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, France and Japan – gathered at the seaside resort of Carbis Bay in southwestern England.

Their “Build Back Better World” (B3W) project, championed by US President Joe Biden’s administration, is aimed squarely at competing with the Belt and Road initiative, which has been widely criticised for saddling small countries with unmanageable debt.

The White House said in a statement that the initiative aims to “help narrow the $40+ trillion infrastructure need in the developing world, which has been exacerbated by the COVID-19 pandemic”.

“This is not just about confronting or taking on China,” a senior US official said. “This is about providing an affirmative, positive alternative vision for the world.”

The leaders of the G7 nations – the United States, Canada, United Kingdom, Germany, Italy, France and Japan – are gathering in southwestern England [Jack Hill/Pool via Reuters]
German Chancellor Angela Merkel, whose nation has huge investments in China, called it an “important initiative” that was much needed in Africa.

“We can’t sit back and say that China will do it but it’s the G7’s ambition to have a positive agenda for a number of countries in the world which are still lagging behind … I welcome it,” she said.

Reporting from the summit, Al Jazeera’s diplomatic editor James Bays said the B3W project was something US officials have been pushing for and “clearly they’ve got backing” from other G7 leaders.

“They say that it [B3W] will be fitting international environmental and labour standards, unlike the Belt and Road Initiative,” said Bays, who noted however that while it was an ambitious idea, it had come about “very late”.

“The Belt and Road Initiative has existed for eight years; it’s very well developed, it’s there in practice. While this right now is just a dream,” he said.

Bays added that financing for the B3W project remains a big question mark, as “US officials briefing reporters said they estimated there was a $14-trillion infrastructure gap … between now and 2035.”

Ryan Patel, a senior fellow at Drucker School of Management at Claremont Graduate University, told Al Jazeera that it will take time for the G7 nations to establish the B3W project, “but I think they can provide a competitive alternative” to China’s Belt and Road Initiative.

Patel said both China and the G7 countries are hoping to diversify their trade partners, especially in light of a coronavirus-related economic downturn. “What China is doing, as well as [what] the other G7 countries are doing, they’re trying to be more independent,” he said.

Public statement

While the G7 agreed to work towards competing against China, there was less unity on how adversarial a public position the group should take.

Canada, the United Kingdom and France largely endorsed Biden’s position, while Germany, Italy and the European Union showed more hesitancy during Saturday’s first session of the summit, according to a senior Biden administration official, who spoke on condition of anonymity.

White House officials have said Biden wants the leaders of the G7 nations to speak in a single voice against forced labour practices targeting China’s Uighur Muslims and other ethnic minorities.

An estimated one million people – most of them Uighurs – have been confined in so-called re-education camps in China’s western Xinjiang region in recent years, according to researchers.

Human rights group Amnesty International in a recent report said Xinjiang has become a “dystopian hellscape”.

Chinese authorities have been accused of imposing forced labour, systematic forced birth control, torture and separating children from imprisoned parents. Beijing rejects allegations that it is committing crimes.

Biden hopes the denunciation will be part of a joint statement to be released on Sunday when the summit ends, but some European allies are reluctant to split so forcefully with Beijing.

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2021-06-12 19:31:31Z
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Second day of G7 summit with world leaders in Cornwall - BBC News - BBC News

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2021-06-12 18:30:32Z
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World holds breath: Iran & Venezuela team up for worrying missile transfer - Biden to act - Daily Express

Two warships are currently traversing the Atlantic ocean to deliver weapons to their South American ally. The news will place Mr Biden in an uncomfortable position as he attends the G7 summit in the UK this weekend. A US intelligence report from last year found Caracas was considering negotiating a new arms deal with Tehran.

The weapons deal could include the transfer of long-range missiles that have the capacity to reach the United States.

The Biden administration has said they could take “appropriate measures” to stop the deadly shipment.

A senior Biden administration this week said: “The sale of the Iranian weapons happened one year ago under the previous US administration.

"Like many situations related to Iran under the previous administration, we are working to resolve it through diplomacy.

“We would reserve the right to take appropriate measures in coordination with our partners to deter the transit or delivery of such weapons.”

Referring to the weapons transfer, US Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin said on Thursday: "I am absolutely concerned about the proliferation of weapons, any type of weapons, in our neighborhood."

Photographic evidence shows the cargo on the Iranian vessels may include fast-attack boats, which can be armed with missiles.

Tehran has frequently used these fast-attack ships to threaten global shipping in the Persian Gulf.

READ MORE: Joe Biden issues warning to Putin in speech to troops

Iran and Venezuela seem to be testing Mr Biden's administration as the transfer is taking place around the same time as the G7 summit.

Eddy Acevedo of the US Woodrow Wilson Center said: “They are testing the new administration to see what it does.

"Iran is looking for leverage for nuclear talks.

"The Venezuelan regime is trying to push the US into providing sanctions relief ahead of talks with the Venezuelan opposition.”

Nicolas Maduro, the leader of Venezuela, said last year that the purchase of weaponry from Iran was a “good idea".

However, former US president Donald Trump's administration warned him to abandon the purchase.

They particularly instructed Caracas to stop the purchase of the Iranian-made long-range missiles.

Referring to Iran's move to transfer the missiles, Emanuele Ottolenghi senior fellow at the right-wing think tank, the Foundation for Defense of Democracies, said: “To send their navy suddenly to the southern Atlantic, it’s basically saying to the US 'you’ve been zipping up and down the Strait of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf for the past four decades.

"'We’re going to do the same to you'".

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2021-06-12 12:53:43Z
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No joint press conference for Putin and Biden: Joe REFUSES to stand next to Russian president - Daily Mail

No joint press conference for Putin and Biden: Joe REFUSES to stand next to Russian president for questions from the media after the pair meet for 'candid' talks next week, with the White House wary the meeting will throw up HUGE differences

  • President Joe Biden will hold a solo press conference after his meeting with Vladimir Putin next week
  • Two leaders meet in Geneva on Wednesday
  • 'We expect this meeting to be candid and straightforward and a solo press conference is the appropriate format,' White House official said 
  • White House reluctant to grant Putin yet another prominent platform in addition to the summit itself and put Biden in unscripted situation 
  • Trump held joint presser with Putin when two leaders met in Helsinki in 2018 

President Joe Biden will hold a solo press conference after his meeting with Vladimir Putin next week, denying the Russian president the opportunity to stand by him and answer questions from the press. 

A joint press conference is traditional when two world leaders meet and President Donald Trump held one with Putin when the two men met in Helsinki in July 2018. 

It was an indication both of the administration's reluctance to grant Putin yet another prominent platform in addition to the summit itself - as well as a reluctance on the part of the White House to put Biden in an unscripted situation that could go off the rails. 

President Joe Biden
Russian President Vladimir Putin

President Joe Biden will hold a solo press conference after his meeting with Vladimir Putin next week

White House will set a different tone for President Biden's meeting with Vladimir Putin compared to when Donald Trump met with the Russian President

White House will set a different tone for President Biden's meeting with Vladimir Putin compared to when Donald Trump met with the Russian President

The two leaders meet in Geneva on Wednesday in an 18th-century Swiss villa overlooking Lake Geneva. It's their first face-to-face meeting since Biden became president.

'We expect this meeting to be candid and straightforward and a solo press conference is the appropriate format to clearly communicate with the free press the topics that were raised in the meeting—both in terms of areas where we may agree and in areas where we have significant concerns,' a White House official said on Saturday.

If they were to do a joint presser, Putin would get the chance to undercut serious warnings Biden wants to deliver on Russian dissident Alexei Navalny and cyber issues. Putin has already scoffed at the issue by raising treatment of US Capitol rioters in an effort to establish equivalency. 

The format of the meeting is still being finalized but, according to the official, the plan is 'for both a working session and a smaller session.' 

Russian and American officials have been going back-and-forth on the format of the meeting, volleying ideas and jockeying for position as the date gets closer.

The sit down comes amid rising tensions between Washington and Moscow, with Biden making it clear he will take a tougher stance on Russian aggression than his predecessor in the Oval Office, Donald Trump.

'We're under no illusions that this is going to be an easy relationship; it is going to be an extremely challenging relationship. And I think we've been quite clear about that,' a senior administration official told reporters on a briefing call Friday.

Biden meeting with Putin in March 2011 when he was vice president

Biden meeting with Putin in March 2011 when he was vice president

President Trump held a formal press conference with President Putin in Helsinki in July 2018, where Putin gave him a soccer ball and Trump sided with him over US intelligence agencies

President Trump held a formal press conference with President Putin in Helsinki in July 2018, where Putin gave him a soccer ball and Trump sided with him over US intelligence agencies

Whatever the final format ends up being, it is expected to be much different than the last meeting between a Russian and American president - both in message and visuals. 

Two years ago, Trump met privately for two hours with Putin in Helsinki and, afterward, they stood side-by-side to answer questions from reporters. 

At the time, Trump sided with the Kremlin over US intelligence agencies, claiming he believed his Russian counterpart when Putin said the Kremlin didn't interfere in US elections. 

'President Putin says it's not Russia. I don't see any reason why it would be,' Trump said. 

Additionally, images of the two men smiling as Putin handed Trump an Adidas soccer ball undercut the stern messages of lawmakers and the intelligence community.

The White House also has yet to answer questions about who will be present during the smaller session, having faced questions about Trump and Putin's decision to meet with only note takers present during past summit meetings.   

Biden will deliver a much tougher message when he talks election interference, cyber attacks, human rights and the Ukraine.

He previewed it earlier this week when he kicked off his eight-day trip to Europe with a speech to US Air Force personnel stationed in the United Kingdom. 

Speaking at RAF Mildenhall in Suffolk he said: 'I'm meeting with Mr. Putin to let him know what I want him to know,' drawing cheers from the troops. 

Putin also didn't sound hopeful about the sit down.

'We have a bilateral relationship that has deteriorated to its lowest point in recent years,' he told NBC News. 

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2021-06-12 11:11:09Z
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Paris riot: Fury against Macron explodes as protesters storm and trash government building - Daily Express

Outrage at Emmanuel Macron's civil service reforms has seen riots erupt in the French capital of Paris. Furious Parisian garbage collectors and sewer workers stormed a municipal building in the capital over the French President's proposed austerity measures. The protesters trashed the building, with footage showing people overturning rubbish containers inside the courtyard.

Trade unions claim the new labour reforms would reduce annual leave and increase working hours.

The austerity measures were approved by Emmanuel Macron's cabinet back in 2019, prior to the Covid pandemic, with the aim to slash over 120,000 civil service jobs across three years.

French political analyst Anne-Elisabeth Moutet told RT: "It's not just resistance to change. There's a guerrilla war between the Mayor of Paris Anne Hidalgo and President Emmanuel Macron.

"Macron wants to streamline the finances of the country. He ordered this before the Covid crisis, which has made it much more difficult because we have spent so much."

JUST IN: Macron savages for ‘posturing’ over Northern Ireland

She added: "He is very unpopular with the people with whom he is unpopular but he still has a fairly important rump of people that will support him. He is very polarising and divisive.

"I think he is worried. The polls are much more narrow and he is within the margin of error in some polls against Marine Le Pen, such as 52 against 48 percent. So yes, he is worried."

The protest, which took place on Wednesday morning, saw hundreds of furious workers storm a Paris town hall in the French capital’s 13th arrondissement.

The demonstration, which saw entire rooms were ransacked, was organised by the General Confederation of Labour (CGT) trade union.

Regional elections will be held in the country this month and a presidential election is scheduled to take place in 2022.

According to the Politico Poll of Polls, President Macron’s approval rating as of June 2 was at 38 percent.

A total of 58 percent disapprove of Mr Macron, while six percent said they had no opinion.

President Macron’s approval rating has not been above his disapproval rating since December 2017 according to the poll, when the rating rose to 48 percent.

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2021-06-12 06:42:00Z
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Hong Kong activist Agnes Chow released from prison - bbc.co.uk

Agnes Chow (centre) leaves prison in Hong Kong. Photo: 12 June 2021
Reuters

Hong Kong's prominent pro-democracy activist Agnes Chow has been released from prison after serving nearly seven months of her 10-months term.

She was greeted by supporters and media - but was driven away without making any comments. The authorities did not say why she had been freed early.

Chow and fellow activists Joshua Wong and Ivan Lam were jailed last year for their role in protests in 2019.

China later imposed a national security law to stifle dissent in Hong Kong.

Chow, 24, left the prison gates at about 10:00 local time (02:00 GMT) on Saturday.

Her supporters were heard shouting "Add oil!" - an expression that became a rallying cry during the mass protests.

Chow did not speak to the waiting media, as she was picked in a car by her friends.

Alongside Wong and Lam, also in their 20s, Agnes Chow became the face of Hong Kong's protests. They remain in prison.

Chow's supporters have dubbed her "the real Mulan", in reference to the legendary Chinese heroine who fought to save her family and country. Others have called her the "goddess of democracy".

Nathan Law, another prominent young activist, has been given asylum in the UK after fleeing Hong Kong.

What is the national security law all about?

Hong Kong - a special administrative region of China - was always meant to have a security law, but could never pass one because it was so unpopular.

So this is about the government in Beijing stepping in to ensure the city has a legal framework to deal with what it sees as serious challenges to its authority.

The details of the law's 66 articles were kept secret until after it was passed last year. It criminalises any act of:

  • secession - breaking away from the country
  • subversion - undermining the power or authority of the central government
  • terrorism - using violence or intimidation against people
  • collusion with foreign or external forces

The law came into effect at 23:00 local time on 30 June 2020, an hour before the 23rd anniversary of the city's handover to China from British rule.

It gives Beijing powers to shape life in Hong Kong it has never had before. Critics say it effectively curtails protest and freedom of speech - China has said it will return stability.

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2021-06-12 04:24:29Z
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