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News ID: 40016
Publish Date : 27 May 2017 - 21:30

G7 Summit Ends Amid Clash With U.S.



TAORMINA, Italy (AFP) – G7 nations risked unprecedented deadlock Saturday as U.S. President Donald Trump resisted pressure to sign up to joint positions on hot-button issues such as climate change, trade and migration.
The Group of Seven leading democracies began the concluding day of their annual summit in discussions with leaders from Ethiopia, Kenya, Niger, Nigeria, and Tunisia.
The five African states are key players in the Mediterranean migration crisis, as countries of origin or transit for hundreds of thousands of migrants attempting to reach Europe via perilous crossings of the Mediterranean. The G7's Italian presidency placed this year's summit in Sicily to underline the proximity of the crisis.
But even that has prompted discord among the summiteers as Trump, according to Italian sources, resists the hosts' desire to issue a declaration underlining the benefits as well as pitfalls of migration.
That sort of language is anathema to a White House that wants to impose a ban on travelers from six Muslim-majority countries.
After starting his first presidential trip abroad wreathed in smiles, Trump is ending it with rebukes, upbraiding America's European partners over military spending, trade and global warming.
An enduring motif of the G7, which represents the lion's share of global economic output, has been to champion free trade.
At last year's summit in Japan, it issued a lengthy communique in support of resisting protectionism, as well as helping refugees and fighting climate change.
But that was then, when Barack Obama still occupied the White House. Today, his successor is defiant about stepping out of the G7 line.
"His basis for decision ultimately will be what's best for the United States," top economic adviser Gary Cohn said at the annual talks in Sicily's ancient hilltop resort of Taormina.
Cohn was referring to whether Trump will execute his threat to walk away from the Paris accord on combating climate change.
That means the G7 is unlikely also to reprise its oft-used terminology against protectionism, after Trump in Brussels this week reportedly described the Germans as "bad, very bad" in their trade practices.
It is a measure of the gulf that the Italians say they expect the final statement to come in at just six pages when it is released Saturday afternoon -- down from 32 pages last year.
German Chancellor Angela Merkel said at the conclusion of the G7 summit that a debate between leaders over climate had been "very unsatisfying", noting the United States had been totally isolated in its refusal to commit to the 2015 Paris climate agreement.
"The entire discussion about climate was very difficult, if not to say very dissatisfying," Merkel told reporters. "There are no indications whether the United States will stay in the Paris Agreement or not."