HomeNewsOpinionG20 Summit: How the Ukraine issue changed colour from Bali to Delhi

G20 Summit: How the Ukraine issue changed colour from Bali to Delhi

Recognition that G20 wasn’t the right forum to address the Ukraine issue, India’s forceful insistence on a joint statement and related diplomacy, and finally the strategic dilemmas that G7, Russia and China found themselves in helped make the New Delhi Leaders’ Declaration possible

September 10, 2023 / 10:43 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
India's powers of persuasion and its global standing was behind the declaration
The New Delhi Leaders' Declaration is a success for India

Foreign minister S Jaishankar and finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman while speaking about the G20 leaders’ joint statement had adopted a cautious tone at the pre-summit media briefing. The high point of the New Delhi Leaders’ Declaration that got adopted on the first day of the summit meeting on Saturday in New Delhi instead of on the culminating day, that is Sunday, did not carry the much expected dissent and divergence over Ukraine, the most contested issue on the table.

There appeared a sense of relief that India’s presidency of G20 is nearing its end on a positive note, and the triumphal tone, which is the general characteristic of Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s leadership style, was absent.

Story continues below Advertisement

G20 Summit 2023 Live: Biden, Sunak to leave Delhi today, PM to meet Macron

The 83-para Delhi declaration, of which only eight dealt with Ukraine, was comprehensive but with enough shifts and nuances in emphasis. The focus was on the 2030 agenda of meeting the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and of meeting the Paris Climate Summit Agreement on restricting the rise of mean global temperature to 1.5 Degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels and in curbing the greenhouse gas (GHG) emission and all other means to achieve it, and of referring to the private sector as an important player in the struggle against climate change.