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South Africa: G20 Summit outcome renews commitment towards multilateralism

Cyril Ramaphosa, the South African president, said that Sunday's Leaders' Declaration of this weekend's Group of 20 Summit reflected "a renewed commitment to multilateral co-operation".

Ramaphosa was the host of the Johannesburg Summit and pushed the declaration through despite the objections of the United States which boycotted this event.

Ramaphosa, who addressed the summit's final ceremony, said that the declaration demonstrated the world leaders' "shared objectives outweighed our differences". Donald Trump, the U.S. president, boycotted the summit on November 22-23 because of the allegations that have been widely discredited - the government in the country with a Black majority persecutes the white minority.

SUMMIT COMME AFTER TENSIONS OVER UKRAINE AND CLIMATE

Trump also rejected South Africa’s agenda, which promoted solidarity and helped developing nations adapt to weather disasters that are worsening, switch to clean energy and reduce their excessive debt costs.

Ramaphosa, however, was able to secure consensus among the leaders at the summit - the first ever on the African continent - for a declaration that used the language the U.S. government has long opposed. The document of the summit stressed the importance of climate change, and the need for better adaptation. It praised ambitious targets to increase renewable energy, and noted the punishing debt service fees suffered by poor nations. The summit took place at a time when tensions were high between world powers due to the war in Ukraine by Russia and the fraught climate talks at COP30.

After the Johannesburg summit, the U.S. will take over the rotating G20 Presidency. However, South Africa has rejected the U.S. offer to send a representative of the embassy in Trump's stead for the handover, citing it as a breach in protocol.

The White House accused Ramaphosa for refusing to ensure a smooth transfer of the G20 presidency. (Reporting and writing by Sfundo parakozov, Alexander Winning, Olivia Kumwenda Mtambo and David Holmes).

(source: Reuters)