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India completes 100 days G20 Presidency

The structure of the G20 meetings is inter-sectoral in nature, covering crucial development challenges ahead of us; including disrupted supply chains, scanty climate financing and Global recession…reports Asian Lite News

Inclusivity, Engagement and Outreach has been the hallmark of Indian G20 presidency since its inception on 1st December 2022.

The Ministry of External Affairs has set up the secretariat within the prestigious Sushma Swaraj Bhawan to oversee the management and delivery of the G20 outreach across the country. Public outreach, Diplomatic engagements, and Public meetings are being conducted at an unprecedented rate leading upto the summit level discussions in September 2023. The vision of the Prime Minister to translate India’s G20 presidency into a carnival of Global diplomacy for Hope, Harmony, Peace, and Stability has been the unpinning theme for deliberations for every department across all state and Central ministries.

The Scale of the G20 Indian presidency could be estimated by the number of engagement group meetings underway across 56 locations since the inception of the Indian presidency.

India has introduced Startup20 to the existing list of forums; Women20, SAI20, Labour20, Civil20, Urban20, Union20, Youth20, Think20, Science20 and Business20. The structure of the G20 meetings is inter-sectoral in nature, covering crucial development challenges ahead of us; including disrupted supply chains, scanty climate financing and Global recession. What makes India’s G20 presidency special is the central placement of India in discussions across Climate change, Energy security, Food security with the greatest demographic dividend.

India is the voice of the Global South and the nature of the succession of G20 presidency both incoming from Indonesia and outgoing to Brazil followed by South Africa, gives India the opportunity to roll out the priorities of the Global south within the G20 forum for an extended duration. India’s G20 presidency is also seen as a reinvigoration of multilateralism and climate discussions after the recent debacles due to the war in Ukraine and the COVID pandemic. For this reason, the theme of the Indian G20 presidency; One earth, One family, One future is a much-needed resurrection of the Sustainable Developments goals and a louder voice of development for the Global South.

The demand for an equitable distribution of development finance and uncompromisable energy security is a contentious issue for the discussion among the global South and North. The dependence on fossil fuels for the foreseeable future in developing economies is the grim reality to serve growing populations in Africa and India. However, a green transition with finance cooperation for developed economies will expedite this otherwise slow transformation. In recent years, India has made Climate change and Development finance for Global south as the centrepiece of its foreign policy. A recent study showed that heat waves, intensified by climate change have cost the global economy trillions of dollars in the last three decades, but this cost was disproportionately borne by the global south which is the least culpable for global warming due to their lower per capita carbon footprint. Most importantly, two major challenges in front of the delicate governance models of the Global south are poverty eradication and Climate crisis, therefore India’s firm leadership is obligated to drive the world out of the climate and financial crisis.

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Sunak marks 100 days as UK PM

Ambulance drivers have also been striking, joining nurses on their first-ever walkout. But Rishi Sunak is adamant that unions’ pay demands will only fuel the decades-high inflation…reports Asian Lite News

On reaching 100 days in 10 Downing Street this week, Rishi Sunak will double the duration of Liz Truss’s brutally short term as British prime minister.

But having stabilised panicky financial markets after the calamitous Liz Truss tenure, the Conservative leader has little to celebrate.

Double-digit inflation is fuelling a winter of misery for many in Rishi Sunak’s Britain.

On Wednesday, the day before his mini-anniversary, up to half a million workers will escalate a rolling series of strikes to shut down schools, railways and other public sectors.

Opposition Labour leader Keir Starmer has been portraying the wealthy premier as “weak” and out of touch, as both parties gear up for an election likely next year.

“Is he starting to wonder if this job is just too big for him?” he told Sunak in parliament last Wednesday.

The Labour leader was merciless as he ran the rule over Britain’s state of permacrisis since Brexit and the Covid pandemic, and “sleaze” among the Conservatives.

Ambulance drivers have also been striking, joining nurses on their first-ever walkout. But Rishi Sunak is adamant that unions’ pay demands will only fuel the decades-high inflation.

“Being an effective manager of public money and public services is not a sin,” senior minister Michael Gove said, rejecting criticism that Sunak is an uninspiring leader after Boris Johnson, who preceded Truss.

“It is the case that first of all we have to bring the stability — and we have — and now we have set out areas where we are performing,” he told Sky News on Sunday.

Prime Minister Sunak faces a mountainous challenge as he bids to emulate Conservative leader John Major’s surprise win over Labour in 1992.

Outside Number 10 in October, he promised “integrity, professionalism and accountability at every level” — in pointed contrast to his two predecessors.

But Rishi Sunak has been forced on the defensive by the tax affairs of the Conservative chairman Nadhim Zahawi, who until this weekend sat in the cabinet.

Starmer on Saturday accused Sunak’s Tories of “moral bankruptcy”, as less well-off voters are forced this winter to choose between eating and heating.

Prime Minister Sunak had sought to buy time by launching an internal inquiry into Zahawi, who admitted to being “careless” with his own taxes and had to pay a seven-figure sum to the UK’s tax agency — when he was finance minister in charge of the same agency.

The inquiry’s report was issued Sunday, making uncomfortable reading for both Zahawi and Sunak, who bowed to the inevitable and fired the Iraqi-born politician.

Prime Minister Sunak, a practising Hindu who at 42 is Britain’s youngest leader since 1812, has brought a smooth-talking, technocratic approach to the premiership borne of his lucrative years in private finance.

Opinion polls show he has restored some of the Conservatives’ reputation for economic competence after the short-lived “Trussonomics” experiment.

But Labour retains an average lead of 20 points overall.

Tory right-wingers such as former Brexit minister David Frost accuse Sunak of lacking vision. “Give us something to fight for,” Frost wrote in The Daily Telegraph newspaper. “And bring Conservatives back to the party.”

Sunak hopes to settle one running sore by reforming post-Brexit rules governing trade in Northern Ireland. A row over the protocol has paralysed self-government in Belfast.

But any deal with Brussels risks provoking Brexiteer hardliners among Tory MPs, many of whom accuse Prime Minister Sunak of betraying Johnson and are likely to stir trouble if local elections in May turn out badly for the party.

Tim Bale, politics professor at Queen Mary University of London and author of a forthcoming book on the Conservatives since Brexit, said Sunak had missed opportunities to carve out a fresh start from Johnson.

“Sunak may have inherited something of a poisoned chalice but he nevertheless had a real opportunity to signal a big change at the top,” Bale said.

“Yet even a cursory glance at the polls after his first 100 days suggests he’s flunked it. In short, he’s lived down to expectations. If I were to award him a C plus, I’d probably be erring on the side of generosity. Most voters wouldn’t go any higher than a D.”

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