The Russian official told Reuters that Putin planned to skip a
working session on Sunday at the two-day summit in Brisbane and
bring forward his departure because he needed to attend meetings in
Moscow.
Russia denied it was involved in a recent escalation of military
activity in Ukraine, where fighting has claimed more than 4,000
lives, but faced strong rebukes from Western leaders, including U.S.
President Barack Obama and Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
"I guess I’ll shake your hand but I have only one thing to say to
you: you need to get out of Ukraine," Harper told Putin at the
summit, according to his spokesman Jason MacDonald.
Putin’s response to the comment wasn’t positive, MacDonald said in
an email, without elaborating.
Obama said Russian aggression against Ukraine was a threat to the
world, while the European Council demanded Moscow withdraw troops
and weapons from the neighboring nation and put pressure on rebels
there to accept a ceasefire.
Speaking on the sidelines of the summit, Obama placed security and
climate change at the center stage of the leaders meeting,
overshadowing talks on how to lift flagging global economic growth.
Obama said the United States was at the forefront of "opposing
Russia's aggression against Ukraine, which is a threat to the world,
as we saw in the appalling shoot-down of MH17".
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said the European Union was
considering further financial sanctions against Russian individuals
because of the crisis in Ukraine.
"The present situation is not satisfying," Merkel told reporters at
the summit. "At present the listing of further persons is on the
agenda."
Europe's foreign ministers will meet on Monday to assess the
situation in Ukraine and whether further steps including additional
sanctions were needed against Russia, said European Council
President Herman Van Rompuy.
Putin's isolation at the G20 summit was also evident with his
placing on the outer edge for the formal leaders photograph. While
Obama and Chinese Premier Xi Jinping were met by Australia's
governor general and attorney general when they arrived in Brisbane,
Putin was met by the assistant defense minister.
Despite being under intense pressure, Putin was all smiles, shaking
hands with host Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, who had
threatened to "shirt front", or physically confront, him over the
downing of Malaysian airliner MH17 over Ukraine, in which 28
Australians died.
ONLY TOPIC DISCUSSED
A Kremlin spokesman said the Ukraine crisis was the only topic
discussed at a one-on-one meeting between Putin and British Prime
Minister David Cameron, but he added both expressed interest in
"ending confrontation" and rebuilding relations. Putin also met
French President Francois Hollande, and both agreed to protect their
ties from the effects of sanctions, the spokesman said.
[to top of second column] |
Outside the summit, Ukrainian Australians staged an anti-Putin
protest, wearing headbands reading "Putin, Killer". Draped with
the flags of the nations that lost citizens when the flight MH17 was
shot down, the demonstrators lay on a large Ukrainian flag, in what
they said was a protest at the "murderous acts" Russia's president
was responsible for.
G20 host Australia had hoped that the two-day summit would focus on
global economic growth, not security or the environment.
Obama also said the United States would renew commitment to its
strategic pivot to the Asia-Pacific in comments seen as a veiled
warning to China.
Obama insisted that Asia’s security order must not be based on
"coercion or intimidation ... where big nations bully the small, but
on alliances for mutual security".
He did not explicitly point the finger at China, but there was
little doubt that he was alluding to Beijing’s maritime disputes and
growing concern about its military build-up.
Despite Australia's reluctance to allow climate change on the summit
agenda after it abolished a tax on carbon emissions, Obama spent a
large part of his speech urging action on the environment. He
pledged a $3 billion U.S. contribution to an international fund to
help poor countries cope with the effects of climate change.
But Australia stuck to its economic script.
A plan to increase global economic growth by an additional 2
percentage points over the next five years was on track, Australian
Treasurer Joe Hockey said.
"This ambition translates into about $2 trillion in additional
global economic activity and millions of new jobs," he said.
(Additional reporting by Jane Wardell, Matt Spetalnick, Matt Siegel,
Ian Chua and Lincoln Feast in Brisbane; Writing by Michael Perry;
Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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