The leaders of the Group of 20 called for a just and sustainable peace in Ukraine, Sudan and Palestine

In a stateme, the leaders of the Group of 20 called for a “just and lasting” peace in the main war-torn regions of the world.
According to RCO News Agency, at the opening of the summit in Johannesburg by Cyril Ramaphosa, the preside of South Africa, emphasizing on “multilateralism” in a declaration, the leaders of the G20 called for the resumption of diplomacy in order to achieve peace in the main war-torn regions of the world, including Ukraine, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Sudan and Palestine.
At the opening of the G20 summit without the presence of US Preside Donald Trump, who has boycotted the summit, Ramaphosa emphasized the need for “multilateralism” in order to deal with the “threats facing humanity today” and said: “The G20 emphasizes the importance and value of multilateralism.”
According to the “First Post” website, the leaders of the Group of 20 emphasized in a joi stateme that they wa a “just” and “sustainable” peace in the war-torn areas and “resumption of diplomatic efforts aimed at ending the wars in Ukraine, the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Sudan, and the violence in the occupied Palestinian territories.”
This stateme states: “We emphasize the importance of strengthening multilateral cooperation with the aim of addressing the emerging risks facing the global economy. We will work towards the establishme of a just, comprehensive and sustainable peace in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Occupied Palestinian Territory and Ukraine.
Trump boycotted the meeting, claiming that “South Africa treats its white citizens “cruelly and unfairly” and protesting the agenda of the summit host, which focused on supporting unity, supporting developing couries in dealing with natural disasters, transitioning to clean energy and managing unsustainable debt pressures.
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