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India a voice for Global South at G7, says foreign minister

India a voice for Global South at G7, says foreign minister

France 249 hours ago

India is not a member of the G7 -- which comprises Britain, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States -- but the world's most populous nation and one of its biggest economies has been invited to summits since 2019.
"We have been an outreach country in the G7 for many years, and I think it brings benefits to the G7," he told AFP in Paris.
"There are very strong feelings in the Global South about the inequities of the international order, the desire to change it, and we are very much part of that," he added.
"It is important for us to organise ourselves and make our presence felt."
The leaders of the G7 kick off a yearly summit in the Canadian Rockies on Sunday.
They have invited Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, along with the leaders of Ukraine, Mexico, South Africa and South Korea, to attend at a time of global turmoil and a radical new US approach to world affairs.
The member nations are also expected to deliberate on troubled relations with China and Russia.
India is a leading member of BRICS -- a bloc of leading emerging economies that includes Russia and China, whose leaders are set to meet in early July.
BRICS has growing economic clout and is increasingly seen as a G7 rival.
Jaishankar said India had "the ability to work with different countries in a way without making any relationship exclusive".
"To the extent that that serves as a bridge, it's frankly a help that we do to international diplomacy at a time when, mostly what you see are difficult relationships and excessive tensions," he added.
No need for 'more tension'
The foreign minister said his country had been in favour of direct talks between Russia and Ukraine to end the conflict since 2022.
But Jaishankar -- whose nation is a political ally of Russia and trades with Moscow -- said sanctions such as those against President Vladimir Putin's government did not work.
"Where sanctions are concerned, you could argue that it has not actually had much impact on policy behaviour," he said.
Europeans are in favour of a plan for a "secondary" sanctions plan, including a 500-percent tariff on countries that buy Russian oil, gas and raw materials.
"The world does not need more tension, more conflict, more hostility, more stresses," the former Indian ambassador in Washington said.
US President Donald Trump is expected at the G7 summit in Kananaskis, Alberta.
Modi is expected to meet him to push a trade deal with the United States -- India's largest trading partner -- before the July 9 deadline when Washington's punishing 26 percent tariffs are set to resume.
Jaishankar said Trump "clearly, in many ways, represents a discontinuity".
"He is definitely a very nationalistic person who puts his country's interests very strongly ahead," he added.
'Stable relationship' with China
As for China, it was a balancing act, said the minister.
India and China, the world's two most populous nations, are intense rivals competing for strategic influence across South Asia, and their 3,500-kilometre (2,200-mile) shared frontier has been a perennial source of tension.
Their troops clashed in 2020, killing at least 20 Indian and four Chinese soldiers, and forces from both sides today face off across contested high-altitude borderlands.
Despite both country's differences, "we are also today the major rising powers in the world", Jaishankar said.
"Where we (India) have to be strong and firm, we will be strong and firm. Where we have to forge a stable relationship, we are prepared to do that," he added.
China has also been a staunch partner of India's arch-enemy Pakistan.
Pakistan used Chinese jets against India when the nuclear-armed foes fought an intense four-day conflict last month in which 70 people were killed, their worst standoff since 1999.
The fighting was triggered by an April 22 attack on civilians in Indian-administered Kashmir that New Delhi accused Pakistan of backing -- a charge Islamabad denies.
The territory is claimed in full by both India and Pakistan, which have fought several wars over Kashmir since their 1947 independence from British rule.
But Jaishankar dismissed fears at the time of a nuclear escalation.
These were "only the concerns of people who were completely uninformed," he said.

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