The Group
of Seven industrialized nations has kicked off a two-day summit in a luxury
resort in Bavaria. Going into Sunday's G7 meeting, talk was dominated by civil
war in Ukraine and a credit crunch in Greece.
Journalists
and policemen based in and around Garmisch-Partenkirchen's quaint timber-frame
guesthouses and hotels woke on Sunday morning to the sound of helicopters
hovering above the usually tranquil Alpine skiing resort nestled among snowcapped
mountains in Southern Germany: They were shuttling camera teams and journalists
to the Schloss Elmau, the luxury castle where leaders of the Group of Seven -
the United States, UK, Canada, Italy, France, Japan and Germany - were set to
arrive for their annual summit.
This year,
G7 leaders planned to discuss a wide range of topics behind closed doors,
including global trade, ensuring more sustainable supply chains, new Millennium
Development Goals, international terrorism, and the civil wars and standoffs in
the Middle East, Ukraine and the South China Sea. Other planned topics include
climate change, the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Pact between the EU and
US, commonly known as TTIP, and lessons learned from the most recent Ebola
outbreak, as well as how to respond to other tropical diseases.
Merkel took Obama out for Bavarian |
German
Chancellor Angela Merkel and US President Barack Obama, the first foreign
leader to arrive, kicked off the day by joining locals dressed in dirndl and
lederhosen for a Bavarian show of beer, pretzels and oompah music in the nearby
village of Krün. But, before the camera teams zoomed in on Obama, Merkel and
Bavarian dignitaries as they tore in to the local delicacies, both leaders
issued stark warnings to Russia over what the US president called Vladimir
Putin's "aggression" in Ukraine.
At a press
conference, EU President Donald Tusk, who is also attending the summit, said he
wanted to "reconfirm G7 unity on sanctions policy." Russia, he said,
would stay out of the G7 "community of values" as long as it
"behaves aggressively with Ukraine and other countries."
Russia
joined the G7 nations in 1998, creating the Group of Eight, which became the
Group of Seven again last year after the other leaders kicked the country out
over its interference in Ukraine. Following the annexation of Crimea by Russia,
the United States and EU also imposed sanctions on Russian individuals and
businesses.
Greece high
on the agenda
In a
bilateral meeting, Obama and Merkel also discussed financially ailing Greece.
According to a White House spokesman quoted by news agencies, the two leaders
agreed that the country must reform and return to sustainable long-term growth.
Greece's government has been locked in negotiations with its creditors to reach
a last-minute deadline before the country has to repay a 300 million-euro
($333.5 million) loan to the IMF by the end of the month.
The seven
leaders had much more on their agenda than Greece and Russia, however, as the
cameras left the room ahead of the first of the six off-the-record meetings
that make up the summit. This year, Germany is also pushing for a pledge to
create the Vision Zero Fund, which would guarantee sustainable supply chains by
financing preventative measures to guarantee safety standards, such as fire
safety measures.
Jörn
Kalinski, the director of advocacy and campaigns for Oxfam in Germany, told DW
that the Vision Zero Fund "would be a very big and important step forward.
We should really end this perverse situation where we have our economic
prosperity based on human rights violations and ecological sins committed in
the developing world." However, Kalinski, one of several NGO
representatives gathered in the press center, added that he was "a little
pessimistic" that the initiative would receive much concrete support from
the other G7 countries, which face strong lobbies for multinational companies
at home.
Geeta
Bandi-Philips, of World Vision, also said that this G7 summit was not likely
"to be a pledging conference" when it came to sustainable development
goals. But it was a good place, she said, to start thinking about how global
leaders "could make sustainable development a reality for everyone
else."
As is
usually the case during such meetings, activists expect few concrete binding
commitments in the 15-odd page communique set to be released after the summit
closes Monday afternoon.
Protesters
fail to breach security parameter
The G7
began in 1975 as the Group of Six, with all the same nations, except Canada.
Detractors say the group's annual summits are excessively expensive and lead to
too few concrete results. They note that other forums, like the United Nations
or even Group of 20 meetings, include poorer countries. The G7's critics say
the more-inclusive meetings have proved much better at tackling issues that
require a global response, such as climate change or trade policy.
A variety of causes united to oppose the G7's agenda |
Other
dissenters reject the idea of globalization more generally. They include many
of the demonstrators who took to the streets on Saturday in
Garmisch-Partenkirchen, among them anarchists, Kurdish activists and even a
Hare Krishna monk. Police mobilized from across Germany clashed with the
protesters several times. However, the large-scale violence many had feared did
not materialize.
On Sunday,
several hundred protesters hiked for hours along a steep track through the
mountains to reach the security parameter around Schloss Elmau before being
turned back by police. Frank Duden, an organizer of the demonstration, told
DW's Sabrina Pabst, who accompanied the protesters on their march, that he was
there because G7 leaders only made "decisions on behalf of companies and
very rich people." Rather than spending money on hosting an expensive
summit, Duden said, the funds should be used "to build a better world in
Africa, Asia or South America."
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