France hosts wary G7 in shadow of Trump
snub, Brexit and yellow vests
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[April 05, 2019]
By Richard Lough and John Irish
DINARD, France (Reuters) - France offered a
wary welcome to foreign ministers from the Group of Seven on Friday for
a meeting overshadowed by a snub from Donald Trump's U.S.
administration, a meltdown in Britain over Brexit and months of
anti-government protests at home.
Protesters spray-painted slogans attacking President Emmanuel Macron in
the sleepy coastal resort of Dinard where the ministers were due to
gather to set the agenda for their leaders at the annual big power
summit in August.
Workers at dawn scrubbed furiously at walls daubed with "Thieving
banks", "Revolution" and "No to the G7", slogans which mirrored the
anger vented across France in more than five months of anti-government
"yellow vest" protests.
French diplomats say they have scaled back their ambitions for their
presidency of the club of big rich countries, after Trump backed out of
a joint communique at last year's summit in Canada and criticized Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau.
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo will not attend and is sending a
deputy. One seasoned diplomat in Paris said Pompeo had sent a message
that he had "better things to do".
Still, the agenda includes important issues from cyber security and
foreign interference in democracies, to countering trafficking in the
Sahel and inequality.
British Foreign Secretary Jeremy Hunt said he would call on his European
counterparts to support his government's request for a further delay to
Britain's exit from the EU, scheduled to take place in a week unless EU
countries agree an extension.
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French Interior Minister Christophe Castaner attends a news
conference during a meeting of the Interior ministers of G7 nations
in Paris, France, April 5, 2019. REUTERS/Charles Platiau
Prime Minister Theresa May has been unable to pass her withdrawal
agreement in parliament. Hunt said the G7 was proof Britain was not
pulling back from a leading international role.
"The UK's involvement in the G7 is vital for our collective security
and prosperity as we seek to protect the rules-based international
system," he said. "Be in no doubt that once Brexit has happened, the
UK will remain a global power."
Along with the United States, France and Britain, the group includes
Japan, Germany, Italy, Canada and the European Union. The
ministerial meeting is meant to ensure that when the leaders convene
in Biarritz in August, they are largely in agreement.
But tensions between the United States and its European allies,
particularly over trade, climate change and the nuclear deal with
Iran, have meant that where they were once largely in accord, they
now seek the lowest common denominator.
(Reporting by Richard Lough and John Irish in Dinard, additional
reporting by William James in London; Editing by Peter Graff)
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