G20 summit opens with Saudi king urging united response to coronavirus

21 November 2020, 14:34

Saudi Arabia's King Salman
G20 A Disconnected Summit. Picture: PA

The G20’s member countries represent around 85% of the world’s economic output.

Saudi Arabia’s King Salman has opened the G20 summit as the coronavirus pandemic overshadows this year’s gathering of heads of state.

The crisis has transformed the summit from an in-person two-day meeting of the world’s most powerful leaders to a virtual gathering of speeches and declarations.

The pandemic, which has claimed more than 1.37 million lives worldwide, has offered the G20 an opportunity to prove how such bodies can facilitate international co-operation in crises – but has also underscored their shortcomings.

The G20’s member countries represent around 85% of the world’s economic output and three-quarters of international trade.

“We have a duty to rise to the challenge together during this summit and give a strong message of hope and reassurance,” King Salman said in his opening remarks.

The kingdom, which assumed the G20 presidency this year, is the host of the virtual summit that is bringing together leaders from the world’s richest and most developed economies, such as the US, China, India, Turkey, France, the UK and Brazil, among others.

US President Donald Trump is among those expected to participate in the closed-door virtual sessions that are taking place on Saturday and Sunday.

“The Covid-19 pandemic has been an unprecedented shock that affected the entire world within a short period of time, causing global economic and social losses,” said the Saudi monarch, who convened G20 heads of state for an emergency meeting in March as the coronavirus was fast-spreading around the world.

At the time, the recorded global death toll from the virus had just climbed past 22,000.

G20 leaders vowed to share information and the material needed for research, to exchange epidemiological and clinical data, and to strengthen health systems.

They also promised to work together to increase funding for vaccine research.

While quick research and sharing of scientific information for the development of Covid-19 tests and vaccines has happened, individual G20 countries have mostly focused on securing their own vaccine supplies.

King Salman urged G20 leaders to provide support to developing countries in a co-ordinated manner.

The Saudi monarch touted G20 efforts to inject more than 11 trillion dollars into the global economy this year as stimuli to support businesses and the most vulnerable.

He also commended the group for extending protections to those most impacted by the global economic recession, including a G20 decision to suspend debt payments for the world’s poorest countries until mid-2021 to allow those nations to focus their spending on healthcare and stimulus programmes.

“I am confident that the Riyadh summit will deliver significant and decisive results and will lead to adopting economic and social policies that will restore hope and reassurance to the people of the world,” King Salman said.

By Press Association

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