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Politics

G7 in Biarritz: Takeaways from day two

August 26, 2019

World leaders are gathered in Biarritz for the annual G7 summit. Here are the key developments from day two.

G7
Image: Reuters/C. Barria

The G7 summit wrapped up its second day on Sunday, with the leaders of the US, France, Germany, Japan, the UK, Italy and Canada nearing agreement on the fires raging in the Amazon rain forest.

Here is a wrap-up of day two.

​​​​​​Read the day one wrap here.

Amazon fires

French President Emmanuel Macron said leaders had neared agreement on helping fight deliberately lit fires that are raging through Brazil's Amazon rain forest.

Angela Merkel said German officials would talk with Brazilian authorities about Amazon reforestation. "The lungs of our whole Earth is affected," the chancellor said, "and so we must find common solutions." 

Read more: Amazon fires spark European rift at G7 over Mercosur trade deal

Iran's Zarif appears

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammed Javad Zarif paid a surprise visit to meet with Macron. Zarif, sanctioned by the US, said salvaging the 2015 nuclear deal would be difficult but "worth trying." 

His unexpected and brief visit came as Macron reportedly gained the blessing of leaders to pursue efforts; however, Macron later denied that he had any such "mandate."

Merkel said she welcomed efforts toward de-escalation.

US-UK trade deal

Donald Trump vowed to work out a "very big trade deal, bigger than we've ever had" with the United Kingdom after Brexit. The US president said the British would lose "the anchor around their ankle" after leaving the EU.

"We're looking forward to having some pretty comprehensive talks about how to take forward the relationship in all sorts of ways, particularly on trade," UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson said. Last week he'd found a less-appeasing negotiating partner in Merkel.

Other countries join in

Macron invited African leaders to discuss problems, and officials from India, Australia, Chile and Spain joined for dinner Sunday. Talks focused the environment and other issues.

US officials said Macron had shifted the focus to "niche issues" rather than major global concerns. French authorities denied this, pointing to Sunday's initial session, which covered the economy, trade and security — areas that used to draw easy consensus but have become sources of great friction.

Tech tax

French officials held a special dinner with White House counterparts, attempting to ease tensions over a proposed tax on big tech companies in France. French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire was hoping to convince US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, US trade representative Robert Lightizer and White House economic adviser Larry Kudlow that the tax was not meant to harm specifically US companies.

Protests

Several hundred anti-G7 protesters carried upside-down portraits of Macron as part of a climate and social justice march. Authorities said 19 people were arrested as part of the the beefed-up security plan

mkg/aw (Reuters, AFP, dpa, AP)

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