Close X
Thursday, December 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Summit 'important moment to gather,' Trudeau says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jun, 2022 10:32 AM
  • Summit 'important moment to gather,' Trudeau says

WASHINGTON - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau isn't saying whether he supports President Joe Biden's decision to exclude Venezuela, Nicaragua and Cuba from this week's Summit of the Americas.

Trudeau acknowledges that some of the countries in the Western Hemisphere are "less like-minded" than others.

But he says they all share a number of urgent issues, such as migration pressures, climate change and recovering fully from the COVID-19 pandemic.

All three are expected to be on the agenda at the weeklong summit as the prime minister departs for Los Angeles later today.

On the way, he and Defence Minister Anita Anand are stopping in Colorado Springs, Colo., for meetings with commanders and officials from Norad, the joint-command continental defence system slated for upgrade.

Also accompanying Trudeau are Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault and Foreign Affairs Minister Mélanie Joly, who is scheduled to meet with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Mexican counterpart Marcelo Ebrard.

"It's extremely important that we have an opportunity to engage with our fellow hemispheric partners — some like-minded, some less like-minded," Trudeau told a news conference Monday in Ottawa with his Chilean counterpart Gabriel Boric at his side.

"Talking about the important issues that our people have in common, whether it's migration pressures, whether it's climate change, whether it's coming through this pandemic, this is an important moment for us to gather."

Canada continues to champion the importance of human rights and democratic values in all three of the excluded countries, "even as we recognize that Canada has a long-standing approach to Cuba that is different from the United States."

Boric was much more forceful in condemning the White House "error."

"We have to express in the United States and elsewhere that exclusion is not the right path," Boric said.

"When the United States claims to exclude certain countries from the summit, they're actually then reinforcing the position that these other countries take in their own countries."

Biden’s decision to exclude the three countries prompted Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador to confirm Monday he would be staying away.

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre rejected the idea Monday that the decision of López Obrador to steer clear of the summit is a sign of waning U.S. influence across the hemisphere.

"The U.S. remains the most powerful force in driving hemispheric actions to address core challenges facing the people of the Americas — inequality, health, climate and food security," Jean-Pierre said.

"The president has to stick by his principles. He believes that he needs to stick by his principles and not invite dictators, but we can still have a fulsome conversation — there is a full agenda where he's going to be very busy."

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh said Tuesday that the three countries should not be barred from having their voices heard at the summit just because Biden has "different political views."

"Concerns raised around human rights are always important to consider, but that is no grounds to deny these countries participation in a Summit of the Americas. I think that was the wrong decision," Singh told reporters in Ottawa.

"I understand why the president of Mexico is protesting," he added. "Canada should also make it clear that we support the participation of these three countries."

Other summit priorities will include helping countries bring COVID-19 under control, forging new ties on climate and energy initiatives, confronting food insecurity and leveraging existing trade agreements to better ensure more people are able to reap the benefits.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. politicians leave legislature until fall

B.C. politicians leave legislature until fall
The session also saw the legislature return to its pre-COVID-19 operations of face-to-face interactions after two years of virtual news conferences and hybrid sittings.

B.C. politicians leave legislature until fall

3 children hit as car jumps curb at UBC

3 children hit as car jumps curb at UBC
A statement from the RCMP says it happened just after noon on Wednesday. The children, believed to be nine or 10-years old, were walking near the UBC Botanical Gardens when they were hit.

3 children hit as car jumps curb at UBC

Man arrested after Vancouver gas station attack

Man arrested after Vancouver gas station attack
Vancouver police say it unfolded Wednesday at a gas station where a pedestrian was hit with a vehicle, then the driver got out of his car and chased several people while holding a knife and machete. A statement from police says the suspect reportedly punched a passerby before turning back to the pedestrian and stabbing him in the neck and back.

Man arrested after Vancouver gas station attack

Bank of Canada increases interest rate to 1.5 percent during inflation

Bank of Canada increases interest rate to 1.5 percent during inflation
The increase in global inflation is occurring as the global economy slows. The Russian invasion of Ukraine, China’s COVID-related lockdowns, and ongoing supply disruptions are all weighing on activity and boosting inflation. 

Bank of Canada increases interest rate to 1.5 percent during inflation

Tim Hortons app violated privacy laws: watchdogs

Tim Hortons app violated privacy laws: watchdogs
In a report released Wednesday, privacy commissioners say people who downloaded the Tim Hortons app had their movements tracked and recorded every few minutes, even when the app was not open on their phones.

Tim Hortons app violated privacy laws: watchdogs

B.C. joins small group with drug decriminalization

B.C. joins small group with drug decriminalization
Charges will not be laid in B.C. against anyone 18 or older possessing up to 2.5 grams of opioids, cocaine, methamphetamine or MDMA, also known as ecstasy, for three years, starting Jan. 31, 2023.

B.C. joins small group with drug decriminalization