Front Row (L to R): Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, French President Emmanuel Macron, Indonesian President Joko Widodo, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, US President Donald Trump, Saudi Crown Prince Mohammand Bin Salman (Next Host 2020 summit), Shinzo Abe (Host), Argentinian President Mauricio Macri (Previous Host 2018 summit), Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South Korean President Moon jae-in, South African PM Cyril Ramaphosa, German Chancellor Angela Merkel
Middle Row (L to R): Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez, Egyptian President Abdel Fateh el-Sisi (Chairperson of the African Union), Jean-Claude Juncker (European Commission), Australian PM Scott Morrisson, British PM Theressa May, Indian PM Narendra Modi, Canadian PM Justin Trudeau, Italian PM Giuseppe Conte (Italy), Donald Tusk (EU council), Senegal PM Macky Sall (NEPAD Chair), Chile President Sebastian Pinera (APAC chair), Singapore PM Lee Hsien Loong
Last Row (L to R): Randal Quarles (FSB President), Roberto Azevêdo (WTO DG), Guy Ryder (ILO DG), José Ángel Gurría (OECD Sec-Gen), Mexican Secretary of Foreign Affairs Marcelo Ebrard, Thai PM Prayut Chan-O-cha (Chairperson of ASEAN), Dutch PM Mark Rutte, Vietnamese PM Nguyen Xuan Phuc, Antonio Guterres (UNSC Sec-Gen), Christine Lagard (IMF President), Takehiko Nakao (ADB President), Tedros Adhanom (WHO DG), David Malpass (World Bank President).
The 2019 G20 Osaka summit was the
fourteenth meeting of the
G20, a forum of 19 countries and the
EU that together represent most of the world economy. It was held on 28–29 June 2019 at the
International Exhibition Center in
Osaka.[2][3] It was the first G20 summit to be hosted by
Japan.[4] The dinner and cultural event on 28 June was held at the
Osaka State Guest House.[5][6]
The 2019 G20 Summit discussed eight themes to Ensure Global Sustainable Development.[9] The eight themes were "Global Economy", "Trade and Investment", "Innovation", "Environment and Energy", "Employment", "Women's Empowerment", "Development" and "Health".[10]
Regards to "Trade and Investment", support for the necessary reform of the
World Trade Organization (WTO) was agreed.[11] WHO Director-General
Roberto Azevêdo had been participating in the summit, welcomed the communique.[12]
Regards to "Innovation", necessity of respected and interoperable frameworks on Data Free Flow with Trust, both domestic and international, was discussed.[11]
Regards to "Environment and Energy", a common global vision, the "Osaka Blue Ocean Vision" which is aiming to reduce additional pollution by marine plastic litter to zero by 2050 through a comprehensive life-cycle approach was shared.[11]
Leaders' Special Event was also held, and "Digital Economy" and "Women’s Empowerment" were discussed. During the former event, "Osaka Declaration on Digital Economy" was issued,[13] in which those leaders declared the launch of the "Osaka Track", a process which demonstrates their commitment to promote efforts on international rule-making on digital economy, especially on data flow and electronic commerce.[14][15] Regards to the latter event, a press release compiling the messages from the leaders on their national measures and commitment regarding women's empowerment was issued after the event.[16]
Related topics
The
Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China has issued a statement considering the
Hong Kong Protests as China's internal affairs on June 24. The Chinese government wanted to delist the Hong Kong issue from the summit's agenda for the year, to avoid possible political and security confrontations between all G20 leaders (from outside China) and China. China has threatened to attack G20 nations suspected for “wrongfully” accusing China.[17] However, Japanese Prime Minister Abe had raised the issue to President Xi just before the official summit, while some Hong Kong citizens protested in places around the summit venue. Pro-independence leader
Chan Ho-tin demonstrated with people from Chinese ethnic minorities like
Rebiya Kadeer for Hong Kong, as well as
Xinjiang issues.[18]