Will G20 agree on a joint communique? (GS Paper 2, International Organisation)
Why in news?
- With the G20 Summit in New Delhi, on the heels, Sherpas and negotiators at various G20 ministerial meetings and working groups have been unable to issue a single joint communique thus far.
- Instead, given the stand by Russia and China to oppose the paragraphs on the war in Ukraine contained in the statements that have been issued till now, India has been forced to issue a series of “Chairman’s Summary and Outcomes Documents” at the various meetings.
- These include the three meetings of the all-powerful G20 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors, to ones on Tourism, Education, Labour, Crime and Digital Security and even the Space economy.
Why does a joint communique matter?
- Since its inception in 1999, and upgradation to a leader’s level summit in 2008, the G20 grouping of the world’s biggest economies has always managed to find a consensus within the countries and issue a joint declaration at the end of every summit.
- If that doesn’t take place in New Delhi this September, it would be an ignoble first for the grouping, and could even raise questions over whether the G20 is sustainable in its present form.
G20 Summit in 2014:
- After the Russian annexation of Crimea in 2014, G-8 leaders had suspended Russia, changing the grouping to G-7.
- However, the G20 summit in Brisbane, Australia that year managed to issue a joint declaration without mentioning the Crimean conflict, and even managed a “family photo” with all the leaders including Russian President Vladimir Putin.
G20 Summit in 2022:
- In 2022, the Indonesian G20 presidency faced tense moments as the declaration was negotiated until the very last moment of the summit.
- Russian President didn’t attend, and no “family photo” was allowed, but it managed to issue a document.
G20 Summit in 2023:
- During its tenure as President, India wishes for the best possible outcome at the G20 summit, and hence its negotiators on the “Sherpa track”, who collate the final document, are putting sustained efforts into ensuring a resolution to the logjam over Ukraine.
Why has the current presidency continued with the ‘Bali Paragraphs’ in its documents?
- A lot of hard work went into the formulation of the “Bali Paragraphs”, and therefore they have been imported into India’s G20 documents.
- They say the Bali formulation can be divided into three parts —
- The references to the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) and United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) resolutions “deploring” Russia’s war in Ukraine, which are from the UN and cannot be modified.
- The statement that “most members” strongly condemned the war in Ukraine, refers to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) conventions for “qualifiers” where “most” means 62.5% or 12 of the 20 G20 members.
- The use of Prime Minister Modi’s phrase, “This era is not of war” is universal and doesn’t refer to any one country or war. Meanwhile, the additional line that the G20 is not a forum for security issues, but for economic issues arising from security concerns, like the impact of the Ukraine war on fuel, food and fertilizer prices, is unimpeachable.
- The Indian Sherpa Amitabh Kant has also made it clear that developing countries did not create the Ukraine conflict, nor is the war India’s priority at the G20.
- Instead, India wants to leave the intractable issues for the end, keeping the focus on the induction of the African Union as a member of the G20, development goals, digital public infrastructure, gender-led empowerment, reform of multilateral development banks and other priorities.
Why are Russia and China opposing?
- Russia and China oppose the language on Ukraine, even though it is taken from Bali G20 document that they signed. Both the countries have now refused to endorse the “Bali Paragraph(s)” in every G20 meeting under India’s presidency, albeit for different reasons.
- Russia says the language at Bali no longer holds true as it does not include increased U.S. and European military support to Ukraine, or the increased sanctions against Russia that followed.
- China has said that it doesn’t believe the G20, essentially an economic forum, should discuss “geopolitical issues” as it hasn’t in the past two decades, indicating the Bali statement was an exception.
- An added problem could be the footnote by South Africa in the latest meeting of G20 Labour Ministers in Indore that insists that “Sherpas have not concluded discussions” on the “Bali Paragraph(s)”, indicating that unless this is resolved soon, the issues over Ukraine may see more pushback from other countries to India’s hopes for a consensus.
- On the bright side, Russia, in the last two meetings, appears to have accepted the second, more generic paragraph from Bali that speaks about the problems of conflicts generally, indicating some progress.
What are the chances of a joint communique now?
- With a number of ministerials including the 3rd Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors meeting done, the Sherpa track will kickstart the draft “Delhi Declaration” negotiations from August 1, and try to nail all the areas of differences including U.S.-China tussles over debt sustainability, privacy issues over digital public infrastructure and so forth, and chip away at the most significant differences over the Ukraine war.
- Given the political nature of the Ukraine issue, as well as developments in the war on the ground changing the situation, there may be little point in finalising something that could get dated.
- As a result, until an alternative acceptable language is not hammered out, they have left a “placeholder” reference to “geopolitical issues” in the final G20 Leaders Declaration document being prepared, while they finalise the rest of the document on other issues.
- In addition, Indian negotiators have been taking suggestions from other countries including its two other “troika” colleagues: Indonesia, which hosted the G20 in 2022, and Brazil that will host the G20 in 2024. A draft circulated by Brazil in June that suggested acknowledging the Bali consensus and “moving on” from the Ukraine conflict was rejected, as was a longer Russian alternative draft. Much will now depend on the heavy lifting by leaders including Prime Minister Modi.