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Putin under fire over Ukraine at G20 summit
by Staff Writers
Brisbane, Australia (AFP) Nov 15, 2014


US, Japan, Australia urge peaceful resolution of maritime disputes
Brisbane, Australia (AFP) Nov 16, 2014 - The US, Australian and Japanese leaders on Sunday called for peaceful resolutions of maritime disputes, a day after Barack Obama warned of the dangers of outright conflict in Asia as China contests disputed territory.

In a joint statement Obama, Tony Abbott and Shinzo Abe urged "freedom of navigation and over-flight, and the peaceful resolution of maritime disputes in accordance with international law".

The trio said they were committed to deepening their already strong security cooperation in the Asia-Pacific, which comes amid China's increasingly assertive expansion in the region.

Beijing is locked in dispute with four Southeast Asian countries over lonely outcrops in the South China Sea, and with Japan over another set of islets.

The three leaders, meeting in Brisbane on the sidelines of the G20 leaders summit, said their partnership aimed to ensure a peaceful, stable, and prosperous future for the Asia-Pacific.

"They noted that this partnership rests on the unshakable foundation of shared interests and values, including a commitment to democracy and open economies, the rule of law, and the peaceful resolution of disputes," the statement said.

"The three leaders reaffirmed the global reach of their cooperation and the value of comprehensive US engagement in the Asia-Pacific region."

Obama has repeatedly denied that the United States is bent on thwarting China's economic and political emergence, but has stressed that Beijing must be a responsible actor on the world stage.

In a speech in Brisbane on Saturday he warned of the dangers of outright conflict in Asia and vowed that Washington would remain anchored in the region.

The US president said while there had been stunning economic progress in Asia since World War II, there were also genuine dangers, saying there were "disputes over territory -- remote islands and rocky shoals -- that threaten to spiral into confrontation".

- Growing ties could rankle China -

The prospect of a stronger tripartite alliance, which the leaders said would include enhanced cooperation on trilateral exercises, maritime security capacity building and maritime domain awareness, may rankle Beijing.

China has repeatedly warned of what it says is the danger of Japan "remilitarising" under Abe, and regularly lambasts Tokyo for its apparent lack of repentance for misdeeds before and during World War II.

Abe signalled his eagerness to lift defence ties with Washington and Canberra in an opinion piece for the Australian Financial Review published Friday, calling for "a peaceful, secure and prosperous future for the Asia-Pacific region".

For his part, Chinese President Xi Jinping told the Financial Review that Beijing was ready to increase defence cooperation with Australia, which has long profited from China's voracious demand for its natural resources.

The three leaders met on the margins of a G20 leaders summit at which the Australian prime minister has stressed the need for an economic agenda to spur the world economy.

Before reporters were ushered out of the room, Abbott said at the beginning of the meeting: "It's good to be here with two such economic and strategic partners."

While dogged by disputes with Russian President Vladimir Putin over Ukraine, the G20 summit is expected to wrap up later Sunday with calls to suppress the Islamic State group and to take collective action against the Ebola outbreak.

In their joint statement, the Australian, US and Japanese leaders said they had resolved to tackle each of these pressing issues.

Russian President Vladimir Putin faced Western scorn and scepticism over Ukraine at a G20 summit in Australia on Saturday, underscoring the deepest chill in relations with the West since the Cold War.

At one stage, a member of the Russian delegation told AFP Putin would cut short his visit by skipping the annual summit's final lunch, upending a meeting focused on revamping the global economy and addressing the Ebola epidemic in west Africa.

But the Kremlin quickly stepped in to deny the Russian leader was leaving early under pressure over the Ukraine crisis.

"The G20 summit will be over tomorrow (Sunday), Putin will certainly leave it, when all the work is completed the president will leave," Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said on Russian radio, without specifying whether the Russian leader would attend the lunch.

The Group of 20 nations, which includes the United States and China, found agreement in vowing to "extinguish" the Ebola outbreak -- albeit without any promise of hard cash -- as it worked to reboot growth in the world economy after the shock of the 2008 financial crisis.

But German Chancellor Angela Merkel told reporters in Brisbane that the tensions over Ukraine were hindering efforts to boost economic growth.

"It's clear that these geopolitical tensions, including relations with Russia, are not really conducive to promoting growth," she said. "We are all striving to do everything diplomatically possible to see improvements."

Ukraine is the most pressing test of the club's ability to marry its economic heft to diplomatic troubleshooting, given the Cold War-style divisions between Russia and the West exposed by the former Soviet satellite's separatist crisis.

There was no immediate comment from the G20's Australian hosts or other delegations to Putin's apparent desire to leave early, which came after some testy exchanges in Brisbane.

A Kremlin statement said Putin held "rather lengthy and detailed discussions" with Merkel and European Commission chief Jean-Claude Junker.

"An exchange of opinions on the situation in the southeast of Ukraine took place" in the meeting between Putin and Merkel, the Kremlin said. "Vladimir Putin in detail explained Russia's approach to the situation."

Before his own tense meeting with Putin on the G20 sidelines, British Prime Minister David Cameron said Russia faced a choice, with one option to implement an agreement to allow stability to return to Ukraine free of Moscow's meddling.

"It's important to warn of the dangers if Russia continues to head in the other direction," Cameron said, bluntly warning that Putin had failed to serve Russia's own interests by exposing it to punishing Western sanctions.

"If that path continues and if that destabilisation gets worse, the rest of the world, Europe, America, Britain, will have no choice but to take further action in terms of sanctions," he said.

G20 host Tony Abbott went into a week of Asia-Pacific summitry vowing to confront Putin, particularly over the downing of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet over Ukraine in July.

- Koala diplomacy -

In the event, on Saturday, the Australian prime minister was all smiles as he posed for a handshake with a similarly grinning Putin -- before the two leaders were photographed holding koala bears together.

However, the koala diplomacy was followed by less cuddly talks on the G20 sidelines.

When Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was approached by Putin to shake hands he said, according to Canadian media: "Well, I guess I'll shake your hand, but I only have one thing to say to you: you need to get out of Ukraine."

In contrast, there was concordance at the G20 on the need to turn back an outbreak of Ebola that has so far claimed more than 5,000 lives across eight countries, particularly in west Africa.

"G20 members are committed to do what is necessary to ensure the international effort can extinguish the outbreak and address its medium-term economic and humanitarian costs," the leaders said.

However, there was no G20 cash commitment to back up the statement.

Across the globe in London, the Ebola crisis got some help from rock music stars Bob Geldof, One Direction, Bono and around 30 others. They gathered in a studio to record a 30th anniversary version of the Band Aid charity single to raise money to fight the deadly virus.

UN chief Ban Ki-moon warned the secondary impacts of the health crisis could include serious disruption to farming in the west African countries that "could provoke a major food crisis affecting one million people across the region".

Ban also echoed former Soviet Union leader Mikhail Gorbachev's fears that tensions between Russia and the West had brought the world to the brink of a new Cold War, and described climate change as "the defining issue of our times".

But Abbott -- who is sceptical about man-made climate change -- has fought hard against mentioning global warming in the G20's closing statement.

However, Obama said a Sino-US breakthrough in Beijing this week on reducing carbon emissions proves that a post-Kyoto deal to arrest climate change is achievable, as he unveiled a $3 billion pledge to a UN-backed climate mitigation fund.

"If China and the US can agree on this, then the world can agree on this -- we can get this done," he said in a speech in Brisbane.


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SUPERPOWERS
Obama warns Asian territorial rows could 'spiral into confrontation'
Brisbane, Australia (AFP) Nov 15, 2014
US President Barack Obama on Saturday warned of the dangers of outright conflict in Asia, as China squares off against rival claimants over disputed territories, but vowed that Washington would remain anchored in the region. In a speech at Brisbane's University of Queensland, Obama insisted that his "pivot" of US policy back to Asia was real and here to stay. In the talk, given on the ma ... read more


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