Russia’s Lavrov stays in seat at G-20 during Zelensky speech
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Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov at the G20 leaders' summit in Bali on Nov 15, 2022.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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BALI - Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov stayed in the room during a virtual address by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky to a Group of 20 (G-20) summit, before firing back with a litany of often-made but unsubstantiated accusations, people familiar with the matter said.
The speeches were a prominent fixture of the first session of the G-20 meeting in Bali, Indonesia, that began on Tuesday, and signalled how tensions and fallout from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine
Mr Zelensky, in his address, appealed for support from what he called G-19 nations
While the number of people in the room varies during sessions, it was virtually full for Mr Zelensky, with Mr Lavrov among the audience, the people said.
Mr Lavrov, attending in place of President Vladimir Putin, then took his turn to speak, but said he had also to respond to Mr Zelensky.
He repeated Mr Putin’s argument justifying the Feb 24 invasion as a fight with neo-Nazis in Ukraine, people said, even as the Kremlin has repeatedly failed to show evidence for its claims.
The room was full for Mr Lavrov’s speech, with no mass walkout - something of a rhetorical victory for Russia.
But the reaction was muted in the room, the people said, suggesting other world leaders are tiring of the bombast with Russia’s war now in its ninth month.
There have been walkouts in protest by Ukraine’s allies at previous international gatherings where Russian officials have spoken.
Negotiators for the G-20 meeting have cobbled a draft communique that includes language noting “most members strongly condemned the war in Ukraine and stressed it is causing immense human suffering”.
The declaration though avoids calling it Russia’s war. Moscow refuses to call its actions an invasion, but rather a “special military operation”.
Mr Zelensky, in his remarks, confirmed Ukraine is working with supporter nations to fund new shipments of grain around the anniversary of the 1930s Holodomor famine - a symbolic push that comes amid discussions to extend a deal that allows grain exports from its war-stricken ports. The plan was earlier reported by Bloomberg.
In his address, Mr Zelensky called on all countries - “and in particular your countries, dear G-19 leaders” - to join Ukraine’s initiative to help the poorest with food, according to a person familiar with his remarks.
The Russian invasion has hung over the G-20 leaders’ sessions, which were founded in 2008 to address the financial crisis. The potential for an impasse has cast doubt on the longevity of the bloc, though negotiators were nearing an agreement on the communique - a signal of resiliency and a victory for host Indonesia, which had sought to bridge tensions as much as possible. BLOOMBERG

