Russia Strives to Avoid G20 Isolation as China and India Distance
Themselves
·
West had not done enough to persuade
insurers and shipping companies to distribute Russian wheat and fertilisers.
·
Russia and Ukraine account for about 30%
of the world’s wheat and barley exports, a fifth of its maize, and more than
half of all sunflower oil.
·
The grain deal has been a rare patch of
diplomatic sunlight, but is up for renewal this Friday.
·
The deal allowing exports past the
Russian navy from three Ukrainian seaports has been critical to lowering grain
prices.
·
In a symbolic vote, the UN general
assembly voted on Monday to approve a resolution recognising that Russia must
pay reparations to Ukraine, in a non-binding move backed by 94 of its 193
members.
Russia has been battling
to prevent diplomatic isolation at the G20 summit in Bali as its traditional allies
– China and India – started to distance themselves from the war in Ukraine, which a draft communique said
had caused untold economic damage to the world.
Narendra Modi, the Indian
prime minister, and Xi Jinping, the president of China, both voiced concern about
the war without breaking from their previous defence of Moscow.
US officials were still
pushing for the final communique to pin more blame on Russia. The draft includes language
noting “most members strongly condemned the war in Ukraine” and stresses that “it
is causing immense human suffering and exacerbating existing fragilities in the
global economy”.
The summit’s host, Indonesia, has been trying to keep references
to the war to a minimum, arguing the G20 is not a security forum and that reiteration
of well-known positions will prevent progress on issues such as global debt and
post-pandemic recovery.
The summit being held
on the Indonesian island of Bali marks the first time the G20 leaders have met since Russia’s
February invasion of Ukraine, which Moscow has described as a “special military
operation”. The war and worries over global inflation, food and energy security
have overshadowed the meeting.
In his address, Xi warned against the “weaponisation”
of food and energy, adding that he opposed nuclear war in all circumstances, remarks
that cast a shadow over Russia’s repeated threats to use tactical nuclear weapons
in Ukraine.
“We must firmly oppose
politicisation, instrumentalisation and weaponisation of food and energy problems,” Xi said.
Modi said it was necessary
to recognise the UN had failed as a multilateral institution, putting greater pressure
on the G20 to find solutions. He said it was time for a ceasefire and for diplomacy
to come to the fore.
In a video address that
the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, carefully missed by staying in his
hotel, the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, said it was time for the war
to be stopped, saying it had caused thousands of deaths. But he stressed that a
ceasefire was only possible when armed Russian troops left Ukraine territory.
Wearing his now-familiar
green T-shirt, he said: “I am convinced now is the time when the Russian destructive
war must and can be stopped. It will save thousands of lives.”
Speaking in Ukrainian
to the single most influential audience he has addressed since the war started,
Zelenskiy tried to pitch himself as a man prepared to
reach an agreement with Russia but only on terms that protected Ukrainian sovereignty,
and recognised the valour with which his troops had fought to protect their homeland.
In a pitch to Xi, he condemned
“the crazy threats of nuclear weapons that Russian officials resort to. There are
and cannot be any excuses for nuclear blackmail,” he added, pointedly thanking the
“G19” – excluding Russia – for “making this clear”.
According to Wang Yi,
China’s foreign minister, Xi told the US president, Joe
Biden, at their bilateral meeting on Monday evening that “nuclear weapons should
not be used and nuclear wars should not be fought”.
The French president,
Emmanuel Macron, said in his meeting with Xi they had called for “respect of the
territorial integrity and sovereignty of Ukraine.”
Lavrov, who was in Bali
in place of Putin, condemned what he called the “politicisation” of the meeting.
Shortly after his plane left the island, a wave of Russian missile strikes hit energy
infrastructure and cities in Ukraine that the head of Ukraine’s presidential administration,
Andriy Yermak, said was a response to Zelenskiy’s address to the G20.
The Ukrainian leader also
called in the address for the expansion and indefinite extension of a grain deal
brokered by the UN and Turkey in July.
Much of the diplomatic
arm-twisting at the G20 focuses on the terms by which Russia will allow the deal
to continue. It has already suspended cooperation once, saying the west had not
done enough to persuade insurers and shipping companies to distribute Russian wheat
and fertilisers.
Russia and Ukraine account
for about 30% of the world’s wheat and barley exports, a fifth of its maize, and
more than half of all sunflower oil. The Russian invasion had blocked 20m tonnes
of grain in its ports until the deal was reached in July. Russia says the export
deal has only been partially implemented.
But Russia says the deal
is lopsided because western sanctions have indirectly continued to cast a shadow
over the exports of Russian grain by affecting payments, insurance and shipping.
The grain deal has been
a rare patch of diplomatic sunlight, but is up for renewal this Friday.
The deal allowing exports
past the Russian navy from three Ukrainian seaports has been critical to lowering
grain prices.
The dispute over the future
of the grain deal is part of a wider diplomatic battle between Russia and the west
to convince sceptical opinion in the global south that right is on their side. In
his speech, Zelenskiy, fresh from visiting Kherson, a
city recaptured from Russia this week, gave little ground on the terms for any peace
settlement.
He said such an agreement
could be signed at an international conference, adding that Russia would be required
to hand over some of its assets as compensation for the task of rebuilding Ukraine.
In a symbolic vote, the UN general assembly voted on Monday to approve a resolution
recognising that Russia must pay reparations to Ukraine, in a non-binding move backed
by 94 of its 193 members.