G7 Summit: ‘All countries should respect international law’ PM Modi said during the ongoing border dispute with China

[ad_1]

PM Modi G7 summit speech: Prime Minister Narendra Modi reached Papua New Guinea on Sunday (May 21) in the second leg of his three-nation tour. From Japan, Prime Minister Narendra Modi reached New Guinea, where he attended the G-7 summit and held bilateral meetings with several world leaders.

Earlier, Prime Minister Modi said at the G-7 summit held in Hiroshima, Japan on Sunday that he does not consider the current situation in Ukraine to be an issue of politics or economy, but an issue of humanity and human values.

He called upon all countries to respect international law, sovereignty and territorial integrity. Prime Minister Modi also strongly advocated a united voice against unilateral attempts to change the status quo and said that all countries must respect the UN Charter, international law and each other’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

What did PM Modi say on Russia-Ukraine war?

The Prime Minister said that dialogue and diplomacy are the only way to resolve this conflict. The PM’s remarks come in the backdrop of Russian aggression on Ukraine and the ongoing border dispute with China in eastern Ladakh. In his address, the prime minister also referred to the talks he had with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Saturday and said he would do whatever is possible to resolve the conflict.

 

The Prime Minister’s remarks came after Zelensky addressed the meeting of the G-7 group. In which the President of Ukraine has appealed to the countries of the world to support his country in its security efforts against Russian aggression.

The PM said that today we heard President Zelensky. I met him yesterday also. I do not see the current situation as an issue of politics or economy. I believe it is an issue of humanity, an issue of human values. We have said from the beginning that dialogue and diplomacy is the only way forward. We will do our best to resolve this situation from India.

Lord Buddha mentioned

Referring to Lord Buddha, the Prime Minister said that Lord Buddha has been followed for thousands of years in India and Japan and there is no problem in the modern age whose solution we cannot find in the teachings of Buddha. He said that India has always believed that any tension, any dispute should be resolved peacefully through dialogue and if any solution comes out outside the law then it should be accepted.

“huge impact on developing countries”

The Prime Minister said that it is in this spirit that India has resolved its land and maritime border disputes with Bangladesh. The Prime Minister said that developing countries have limited resources and are the most affected. Due to the current global situation, these countries are facing the greatest and deepest impact of the food, fuel and fertilizer crisis.

Prime Minister Modi arrived in Hiroshima on Friday to attend the three sessions of the G-7 summit following an invitation from his Japanese counterpart Fumio Kishida. The G-7 countries include Japan, the United States, Britain, France, Germany, Canada, Italy, and the European Union (EU).