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US, Russia praise G20 summit declaration as India meeting closes

  • Moscow said ‘everything was reflected in balanced form’ while the US said the declaration stood up for ‘not using force to seek territorial acquisition’
  • Consensus declaration avoided directly criticising Russia’s war in Ukraine. Kyiv said the declaration is ‘nothing to be proud of’

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India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi (C), US President Joe Biden and other world leaders arrive to pay their respects at the Mahatma Gandhi memorial on the sidelines of the G20 summit in New Delhi on Sunday. Photo: AFP

Russia and the US both praised a G20 summit declaration that stopped short of directly criticising Moscow for the war in Ukraine as the bloc’s leaders headed into the final day of deliberations on Sunday.

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The world’s biggest economies adopted a consensus declaration in New Delhi that avoided condemning Russia for the war but highlighted the human suffering the conflict had caused and called on all states not to use force to grab territory.

“Everything was reflected in a balanced form,” Svetlana Lukash, the Russian G20 sherpa, or government negotiator, was quoted as saying by Russian news agency Interfax.

“All members of the G20 have agreed to act as one in the interests of peace, security and conflict resolution around the world.”

White House national security adviser Jake Sullivan told reporters the declaration “does a very good job of standing up for the principle that states cannot use force to seek territorial acquisition or to violate the territorial integrity and sovereignty or political independence of other states”.

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Germany and Britain also praised the resolution but Ukraine said “it was nothing to be proud of”.

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