ANKARA: The Group of Seven (G-7) summit in Hiroshima concluded on Sunday with deliberations on the Russia-Ukraine war and other hot-button issues.
The participants expressed “unwavering support” to Kyiv, Anadolu Agency quoted Japan’s Kyodo news agency report, citing a statement issued at the end of the summit.
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida further shared the aim to achieve a nuclear-free world free from threats.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy also participated in the huddle.
Zelenskyy, who landed at Hiroshima airport on a French government plane on Saturday, is set to hold bilateral talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida later in the day.
During Sunday’s sessions, which were also attended by some leaders from emerging and developing nations, Zelenskyy is believed to have appealed for broad support from the international community, the news agency reported.
Many developing countries have avoided taking sides over Moscow’s aggression against Ukraine, with some of them dependent on Russia, a resource-rich nation, for military and energy supplies.
Later in the day, Zelenskyy, who is making his first visit to Japan since the beginning of his country’s war against Russia in February 2022, is expected to deliver a speech in Hiroshima, one of the two cities devastated by a US atomic bomb in 1945.
The Ukrainian leader also intends to hold a separate bilateral meeting with US President Joe Biden during his visit to Hiroshima.
It follows the Biden Administration’s approval for Ukrainian pilots to be trained to fly F-16 fighter jets as requested by Kyiv.
On Saturday, the G-7 leaders released a communique in which they pledged to support Ukraine as long as the nation faces Russia’s “illegal” aggression.
Zelenskyy met on the same day with leaders from countries including Italy, Britain, India, France, and Germany.
– Black Sea Grain initiative –
Underscoring the importance of collaborative efforts to address the risk of scarcity and the worsening global food security crisis, the summit called on parties to ensure the maximum potential and smooth operation of the Black Sea Grain Initiative.
In the “Hiroshima Declaration for Resilient Global Food Security” issued during the summit, the G-7 leaders emphasised the world’s risk of scarcity and the importance of working together to address the deteriorating global food security crisis.
The declaration noted that Covid-19, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and volatile energy and fertiliser prices threaten global food security, and it highlighted that nearly 828 million people worldwide faced hunger in 2021.
It emphasised the need for access to affordable, safe, and nutritious food as a fundamental requirement, highlighting the importance of increasing predictability in markets and establishing sustainable systems.
“Our common goal is to build a better future for each individual, including resilient global food security and nourishment for all,“ it maintained. – Bernama