Tuesday, November 19, 2024

Trudeau, Biden talk rule of law at Brazil G20 summit amid meetings on global hunger

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RIO DE JANEIRO — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spent his first day at the G20 leaders’ summit Monday speaking in closed-door meetings about issues like continental trade, fighting world hunger and multilateralism, as Donald Trump’s impending return to the White House poses risks to global support for all those things.

Trudeau spent the day in and out of meetings with world leaders from Mexico, Japan and the United Kingdom, but his meeting with outgoing U.S. President Joe Biden took centre stage after news that the U.S. had authorized Ukraine to use American-supplied missiles to strike deeper inside Russia.

While Trudeau did not address that issue publicly on Monday, he did say earlier this fall that he supported Ukraine using long-range weaponry to prevent Russia from continuing to kill civilians.

Defence Minister Bill Blair said in Ottawa Monday that position has not changed, saying Canada has not placed any geographic restrictions on arms or ammunition sent to Ukraine.

“We believe that supporting Ukraine’s efforts to defend themselves against the illegal invasion of Russia is important, and that everything we were able to do to help Ukraine defend itself from that illegal invasion will bring us closer to peace,” Blair said.

Trudeau spoke with Biden for nearly half an hour in what could be their last meeting before Trump takes office in January. Canada has not yet provided details of the conversation but the White House said in its readout of the meeting that Biden “underscored the importance of Canadian defence investment and the modernization of the Columbia River Treaty.”

It said both leaders “agreed that strengthening democracy and rule of law were essential to the prosperity and success of North America.”

Canada has been under increasing pressure from allies, including the U.S., to meet the NATO target of spending two per cent of GDP on defence. While all NATO members have agreed to spend at least that much, Trudeau has said Canada will only reach the target in 2032.

The first sessions with the G20 leaders on Monday were focused on fighting global hunger and poverty. While it took place mostly behind closed doors, Trudeau’s office said he told his colleagues that gender equality has to be part of any solution to solving global poverty and hunger.

His office said he discussed Ottawa’s efforts to not only fund emergency relief but also to address the root causes of hunger in global food systems, including the need to reform multilateral and development-financing institutions.

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