Indonesian President Joko Widodo told G20 members to “end the war” as he opened a leaders’ peak in Bali that will be dominated by Russia’s attack on Ukraine.
“Being responsible means creating not zero-sum situations, being responsible then also means that we must end the war. However, it’ll be delicate for the world to move forward,” he told leaders ahead of the peak’s opening session If the war doesn’t end.
Eyeing a common G20 protestation that would condemn Russia’s eight-month-old irruption and pitfalls to use nuclear munitions, US and European officers painted the peak in Bali as substantiation of Russia’s heightening insulation.
But Jakarta pursues a neutral foreign policy and rebuffed Western pressure to disinvite Moscow ahead of the meeting.
Without mentioning Russia by name, Widodo called on members to not allow another Cold War between major powers.
“We shouldn’t divide the world into corridors. We mustn’t allow the world to fall into another Cold War,” he said.
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‘World’s eye is on G20’
Russia is being represented by Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, with President Vladimir Putin shuffling the gathering.
G20 leaders are gathered in Bali as soaring affectation augmented by Moscow’s assault drives millions more into poverty and tips several nations toward recession.
US abettors hope the profitable headwinds created by the war will bring over G20 nations that, while conservative about denouncing Russia, are deeply concerned about rising prices.
Widodo said the bloc of the world’s major husbandry must succeed in diving the world’s most burning heads.
“Moment, the world’s eye is on us. Will we score a success? Or will we add one further failure?” he told delegates.
“For me, the G20 must be successful, it mustn’t fail.”
Source: AFP