Google – AFP, Guy Jackson (AFP), 18 June 2013
Barack
Obama listens during a bilateral meeting with Francois Hollande
in Northern
Ireland on June 18, 2013 (AFP, Jewel Samad)
|
ENNISKILLEN,
United Kingdom — G8 leaders on Tuesday threw their weight behind calls for a
peace conference on Syria to be held in Geneva "as soon as possible",
after a summit dominated by the country's civil war.
At the end
of two days of talks in Northern Ireland, the leaders also called for agreement
on a transitional government in Syria "with full executive powers, formed
by mutual consent".
British Prime
Minister David Cameron, the summit host, said it was "unthinkable"
that President Bashar al-Assad could play a role in a transitional
administration, but the G8 communique pointedly made no reference to him, in an
apparent concession to Syria's ally Russia.
After talks
which at times pitted Russian President Vladimir Putin against his fellow G8
leaders, the final communique said the Syrian military and security services
"must be preserved and restored" in a future set-up.
Vladimir
Putin speaks during a press
conference in Northern Ireland
on June 18, 2013
(Pool/AFP, Matt
Dunham)
|
The leaders
did not suggest a date for the proposed Syria talks, which were supposed to
take place this month but have already been delayed.
Gathered on
the picturesque banks of Lough Erne, the world's leading industrialised nations
also struck a deal to crack down on tax evasion and share more cross-border
financial information.
They vowed
concrete steps to target not only illegal tax evasion but also tax avoidance by
multinational companies that costs taxpayers billions in lost revenues.
And they
agreed to stamp out the payment of ransoms for hostages kidnapped by
"terrorists", and called on companies to follow their lead in
refusing to pay for the release of their employees.
But the
summit was dominated by the conflict in Syria, which has cost more than 90,000
lives since it broke out in March 2011.
The G8
nations pledged almost $1.5 billion (1.1 billion euros) in humanitarian aid for
refugees inside and outside Syria, including $300 million from the United
States and 200 million euros from Germany.
After
Washington said it would arm the Syrian rebels and the EU mulled the issue, the
G8 said it was deeply concerned at the growing extremism and
"terrorism" in Syria.
The world
leaders called on the regime and the opposition to "commit to destroying
and expelling from Syria all organisations and individuals affiliated to
Al-Qaeda, and any other non-state actors linked to terrorism".
Putin's
sharp differences with US President Barack Obama over Syria were laid bare in
icy face-to-face talks on Monday.
In his
end-of-summit press conference, Putin said defiantly that Russia could not rule
out sending fresh shipments of weapons to the Syrian regime.
The Russian
president also accused the United States of "destabilising" the
situation in Syria with its allegations that the regime has used nerve gas on a
limited scale.
"Any
decision about arms supplies to the opposition based on unconfirmed reports
about the use of chemical weapons only additionally destabilises the
situation," he said.
Barack
Obama (L), David Cameron (C) and
Enda Kenny (R) in Northern Ireland on
June 18,
2013 (AFP, Ben Stansall)
|
Aside from
Syria, Cameron heralded a commitment to fight the "scourge" of tax
evasion and to promote corporate transparency.
"Countries
should change rules that let companies shift their profits across borders to
avoid taxes, and multinationals should report to tax authorities what tax they
pay where," the G8 said.
The final
declaration also called for greater transparency on corporate ownership,
saying: "Companies should know who really owns them, and tax collectors
and law enforcers should be able to obtain this information easily."
But
activists said the deal came up short.
Alex Wilks,
campaign director at global civic organisation Avaaz said opposition from
Canada and Germany "blocked the strong deal the world demanded."
The summit
also saw the launch of formal negotiations on a vast trade pact between the
United States and the European Union.
It was
guarded by 8,000 police officers in the biggest security operation ever mounted
in Northern Ireland's troubled history, but protesters were thin on the ground.
The G8 brings together Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.
The G8 brings together Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States.
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