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    2025 G-20 Leaders’ Summit – Johannesburg Declaration Affirms Multilateralism and Global South Priorities

    2025 G20 Leader’s Summit Latest News

    • At the 2025 G-20 Leaders’ Summit in Johannesburg, the host South Africa achieved the adoption of the G-20 Leaders’ Declaration by consensus—despite the U.S. boycott and attempts to block the text.
    • This was the first G-20 Summit held in Africa, marking an important moment for the Global South, African development, and the evolving global governance architecture.

    Adoption of the Declaration

    • Unusual early adoption:
      • The Declaration was adopted at the start of the Summit, not at the end—an unprecedented step.
      • Negotiated and finalised by Sherpas, enabling early clearance.
    • South Africa’s stand:
      • Declared the adoption an “affirmation of multilateralism.”
      • Asserted that the G20 cannot be paralysed due to the absence of any single country, including the U.S.
    • US opposition: The U.S. did not participate and attempted to block the Declaration. Boycott due to deteriorating Washington–Pretoria ties.

    Key Themes and Priorities in the G-20 Declaration

    • Multilateralism and global cooperation:
      • Reiterated commitment to the UN Charter, international law and peaceful settlement of disputes.
      • Emphasised the African philosophy Ubuntu: “I am because we are.”
    • Weak position on conflicts: 
      • Minimal references to Russia–Ukraine war, Gaza conflict, Middle East tensions.
      • Single-line condemnation of terrorism – “Terrorism in all its forms and manifestations.”
      • Still included a key line – states must refrain from use of force for territorial acquisition.
    • Global South issues:
      • Strong emphasis on debt sustainability, development financing, inequality, African priorities.
      • India ensured Global South concerns, a continuation of India’s 2023 G20 presidency.
    • UN Security Council (UNSC) reform: Called for “transformative reform” of UNSC. Sought increased representation for Africa, Asia-Pacific, Latin America & Caribbean.
    • Women-led development: Reaffirmed commitment to empowerment of women and girls, removing socio-economic barriers, promoting women-led development, and recognising women as agents of peace.

    South Africa’s Bilateral Balancing with the US

    • Balanced diplomacy: Acknowledged the economic importance of the U.S. – U.S. is South Africa’s second largest trading partner. Rejected U.S. claims of “genocide of white farmers” as baseless.
    • Debt sustainability push: Highlighted issue of risk-parity – countries with same risk but higher interest rates.

    India’s Priorities and Contributions

    • Reconsidering global parameters of growth: 
      • The Indian PM argued current economic models have left many deprived of resources and caused over-exploitation of nature.
      • He stressed the need to rethink development, especially as Africa remains most affected.
    • “Integral Humanism”: 
      • The Indian PM promoted Deen Dayal Upadhyay’s Integral Humanism – holistic development of individuals and society through the integration of material and spiritual well-being.
      • It will provide an alternative to Western ideologies such as individualism, secularism, communism.
    • Key initiatives proposed by India:
      • Global traditional knowledge repository: For sustainable, culturally rooted, eco-balanced lifestyles.
      • G20–Africa Skills Multiplier initiative: India to train 1 million Africans in skill sectors.
      • G20 Global Healthcare Response Team.
      • G20 Initiative on Countering the Drug–Terror nexus: Highlighted fentanyl, drug trafficking, and terror financing.
      • G20 Open Satellite Data Partnership: Sharing agriculture, fishing, disaster data.
      • Critical Minerals Circularity Initiative: Recycling, sustainable mining, strategic minerals.
    • India’s diplomatic engagements: ACITI Partnership (Australia–Canada–India) launched for technology and innovation, AI, clean energy, supply chain resilience.

    Broader Geopolitical Backdrop

    • Rising geopolitical fragmentation: Declaration notes trade wars (US tariff wars under Trump), geoeconomic competition, conflicts, inequalities, uncertainty in global economy.
    • Absence of U.S.: First-ever G20 Summit boycotted by the U.S. Raises questions on global leadership transitions.

    Challenges Ahead

    • Weak consensus on global conflicts: Almost no mention of Ukraine, Gaza. Makes it one of the weakest declarations in G20 history.
    • Debt sustainability for developing nations: High interest rates for the same risk profile.
    • Geopolitical fragmentation: US–South Africa tensions, rise of competing blocs.
    • Inequality and resource deprivation: Current growth models unsustainable.
    • Climate change: G20 responsible for the majority of emissions—yet slow collective action.

    Way Forward

    • Strengthen multilateral institutions: Reform UNSC, empower Global South.
    • Sustainable development framework: Integrate traditional knowledge, eco-balanced growth, and integral humanism.
    • Gender-inclusive development: Remove socio-economic barriers, promote women-led governance.
    • Digital cooperation and technology partnerships: Example, ACITI partnership, Satellite data sharing, etc.
    • Counter Drug–Terror nexus: Multilateral intelligence-sharing; regulation of fentanyl, synthetic opioids.
    • Climate action: Promote critical mineral recycling, clean energy supply chains.

    Conclusion

    • The 2025 Johannesburg G20 Declaration marks a pivotal moment in global governance, with Africa asserting leadership, the Global South shaping priorities, and the G20 adopting consensus despite U.S. boycott.
    • While the declaration is symbolically strong on multilateralism, it is weak on major global conflicts and hard security issues. 
    • India played a crucial role in embedding developmental, gender, and sustainability priorities and propelled new initiatives aligned with integral humanism and South–South cooperation.

    Source: TH | IE | TH


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    2025 G-20 Leaders’ Summit FAQs

    Q1. What is the significance of the early adoption of the 2025 G-20 Johannesburg Declaration?+

    Q2. How the 2025 G-20 Declaration reflects the priorities of the Global South?+

    Q3. How does the philosophy of Integral Humanism influence India’s stance at the G-20 Summit?+

    Q4. What are the challenges highlighted by South Africa regarding debt sustainability in the G-20 Declaration?+

    Q5. What is the implication of the limited mention of global conflicts in the 2025 G-20 Declaration?+

    Tags: 2025 g-20 leaders’ summit mains articles upsc current affairs upsc mains current affairs

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