G7 agrees need strong message on South
China Sea, China says don't 'hype'
Send a link to a friend
[May 26, 2016]
By Matt Spetalnick and Tetsushi Kajimoto
ISE-SHIMA, Japan (Reuters) - Group of
Seven (G7) leaders agreed on Thursday on the need to send a strong
message on maritime claims in the western Pacific, where an increasingly
assertive China is locked in territorial disputes with Japan and several
Southeast Asian nations.
The agreement prompted a sharp rejoinder from China, which is not
in the G7 club but whose rise as a power has put it at the heart of
some discussions at the advanced nations' summit in Ise-Shima,
central Japan.
"Prime Minister (Shinzo) Abe led discussion on the current situation
in the South China Sea and East China Sea. Other G7 leaders said it
is necessary for G7 to issue a clear signal," Japan's Deputy Chief
Cabinet Secretary Hiroshige Seko told reporters after a session on
foreign policy affairs.
At a news conference late on Wednesday, Abe said Japan welcomed
China's peaceful rise while repeating Tokyo's opposition to acts
that try to change the status quo by force and urging respect of the
rule of law - principles expected to be mentioned in a statement
after the summit.
The United States is also increasingly concerned about China's
action in the region.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying retorted in
Beijing that the South China Sea issue had "nothing to do" with the
G7 or any of its members.
"China is resolutely opposed to individual countries hyping up the
South China Sea for personal gain," she said.
U.S. President Barack Obama called on China on Wednesday to resolve
maritime disputes peacefully and he reiterated that the United
States was simply concerned about freedom of navigation and
overflight in the region.
Obama on Thursday pointed to the risks from North Korea's nuclear
and missile programs, saying the isolated state was "hell bent" on
getting atomic weapons.
But he said there had been improved responses from countries in the
region like China that could reduce the risk of North Korea selling
weapons or nuclear material.
"It's something that we've put at the center of discussions and
negotiations with China," Obama told reporters.
GLOBAL HEALTH CHECK
The global economy topped the agenda earlier in the day, when G7
leaders voiced concern about emerging economies and Abe made a
pointed comparison to the 2008 global financial crisis. Not all his
G7 partners appeared to agree.
The G7 leaders did agree on the need for flexible spending to spur
world growth but the timing and amount depended on each country,
Seko told reporters, adding some countries saw no need for such
spending. Britain and Germany have been resisting calls for fiscal
stimulus.
"G7 leaders voiced the view that emerging economies are in a severe
situation, although there were views that the current economic
situation is not a crisis," Seko said .
Abe presented data showing global commodities prices fell 55 percent
from June 2014 to January 2016, the same margin as from July 2008 to
February 2009, after the Lehman collapse.
[to top of second column] |
Participants of the G7 summit meetings (from front in clockwise)
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe, French President Francois
Hollande, Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron, Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau, European Commission President Jean-Claude
Juncker, European Council President Donald Tusk, Italy's Prime
Minister Matteo Renzi, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and U.S.
President Barack Obama attend session 1 working lunch meeting at the
Shima Kanko Hotel in Shima, Mie Prefecture, Japan May 26, 2016.
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan/Handout via Reuters
Lehman had been Wall Street's fourth-largest investment bank when it
filed for Chapter 11 protection on Sept. 15, 2008, making its
bankruptcy by far the biggest in U.S. history. Its failure triggered
the global financial crisis.
Abe hopes, some political insiders say, to use a G7 statement on the
global economy as cover for a domestic fiscal package including the
possible delay of a rise in the nation's sales tax to 10 percent
from 8 percent planned for next April.
Obama ripped into Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump,
saying the billionaire had rattled other G7 leaders and that his
statements were aimed at getting headlines, not what was needed to
keep America safe and the world on an even keel.
Trump has been accused of racism, misogyny and bigotry for saying he
would build a giant wall to keep out illegal Mexican immigrants,
would temporarily ban Muslims from the United States and after he
made a series of comments considered demeaning to women.
Summit pageantry began when Abe escorted G7 leaders to the Shinto
religion's holiest site, the Ise Grand Shrine in central Japan,
dedicated to sun goddess Amaterasu Omikami, mythical ancestress of
the emperor.
On Wednesday night, Abe met Obama for talks dominated by the arrest
of a U.S. military base civilian worker in connection with the
killing of a young woman on Japan's southern Okinawa island,
reluctant host to the bulk of the U.S. military in Japan.
The attack has marred Obama's hopes of keeping his Japan trip
strictly focused on his visit on Friday to Hiroshima, site of the
world's first atomic bombing, to highlight reconciliation between
the two former World War Two foes and his nuclear anti-proliferation
agenda.
The G7 groups Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the
United States.
(Additional reporting by Thomas Wilson, Kiyoshi Takenaka, Kylie
MacLellan, Ami Miyazaki, and Ben Blanchard; Writing by Linda Sieg;
Editing by Nick Macfie, Robert Birsel)
[© 2016 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2016 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. |