World leaders arrive in St. Petersburg, Russia on Wednesday for a G20 summit meant to tackle global economic uncertainty but overshadowed by international disagreement over what to do about the worsening conflict in Syria.
The likelihood that Syria and an alleged chemical weapons attack there will be a major topic in the corridors of the G20 meetings was underscored Tuesday by the late announcement that Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird would join Prime Minister Stephen Harper and Finance Minister Jim Flaherty at the summit.
Before he left for the summit Wednesday morning, Harper spoke to British Prime Minister David Cameron about the summit and the situation in Syria, Harper's spokesman said.
The G20 leaders have been meeting regularly since the onset of the global recession in 2008, and this week's official agenda includes meetings on fostering freer trade, creating stronger financial regulations, red-tape reduction and job creation.
Prime Minister Stephen Harper waves as he boards a military Airbus for the flight to the G20 summit in St. Petersburg, Russia. (Chris Rands/CBC)Unofficially though, former prime minister Paul Martin says leaders will take advantage of the opportunity to meet face-to-face to discuss the situation in Syria and how to respond.
"There's no doubt that the discussions out of the room, in the corridors, are every bit as important as the discussions at the table, and there is no doubt that this will form an enormous amount of the informal discussion," Martin said in an interview.
Earlier this week, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov reminded reporters that the G20 was "created to solve exclusively financial and economic problems," but that any leader is welcome to bring up Syria and that the government is prepared for the topic to come up.
That might well be an uncomfortable scenario for Russia. As one of Syria's staunchest allies, Russia is off-side in the international community, particularly since an alleged chemical weapons attack on Aug. 21 that some blame on the governing regime of Bashar al-Assad.
Andrew MacDougall, the prime minister's chief spokesperson, says Harper won't hesitate to raise objections with Russian President Vladimir Putin over human-rights abuses, whether in relation to Syria or to Russia's new law outlawing so-called homosexual propaganda.
"If the two men find themselves in the same room talking, I can assure you the prime minister will raise these matters. Obviously for us the focus of the meeting is very much of the global economy."
That's what Len Edwards will be watching for this week. The former deputy minister at Foreign Affairs was Harper's sherpa, or emissary, ahead of several past G8 and G20 summits.
"I think the maturity of an institution really is tested by these moments when difficult issues are maybe not at the table but are in the environment around that discussion at the table and certainly that's the case now," he said.
Looking for progress on debt
Another test of the institution will come in the form of an official accountability report on how nations have followed through on past commitments to get their fiscal houses in order.
MacDougall says Canada supports that kind of accountability, adding that Canada has already met all of its commitments on debt and deficit reduction. "To keep the credibility of the institution and to keep the global economy on a path of growth we think it's important for countries to meet those targets that they've committed to publicly and to have no backsliding on them."
However, Julia Kulik has studied G20 compliance rates and says they're nothing to write home about.
According to the senior researcher at the G8/G20 Research Group at the Munk School of Global Affairs, nations have the best record on labour and employment where they've followed through on just 57 per cent of their commitments.
Employment is, by any measure, one of the most important topics on the program this week. New statistics show Europe's unemployment rate at 12 per cent, meaning more than 25 million Europeans are out of work.
Scott Gilmore, CEO of Building Markets, a non-profit group, hopes leaders don't trot out plans for yet more skills training.
What's the point, Gilmore asks, when there are likely to be no jobs on the other side of it?
"You know, help the small businesses. They're the ones that are creating 86 per cent of the new jobs, so find out what you can do to help them," he said.
"Is it reducing the red tape? Is it reducing corruption? These are things you can work on. They're not as sexy, as tangible as a training program, but in the end they're going to create a lot more jobs."
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