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34th G8 summit

The 34th G8 summit was held in the town of Tōyako, Hokkaido, Japan, on July 7–9, 2008.[1] The locations of previous summits hosted by Japan include Tokyo (1979, 1986, 1993) and Nago, Okinawa (2000). The G8 Summit has evolved beyond being a gathering of world political leaders to become an occasion for a wide variety of non-governmental organizations, activists and civic groups to congregate and discuss a multitude of issues.[2]

34th G8 Summit
Hokkaido-Toyako Summit
34th G8 Summit official logo
Host country Japan
DatesJuly 7–9, 2008
Follows33rd G8 summit
Precedes35th G8 summit

Overview

The Group of Seven (G7) was an unofficial forum which brought together the heads of the richest industrialized countries: France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the United Kingdom, the United States and Canada starting in 1976. The Group of Eight (G8), meeting for the first time in 1997, was formed with the addition of Russia.[3] In addition, the President of the European Commission has been formally included in summits since 1981.[4] The summits were not meant to be linked formally with wider international institutions; and in fact, a mild rebellion against the stiff formality of other international meetings was a part of the genesis of cooperation between France's President Giscard d'Estaing and West Germany's Chancellor Helmut Schmidt as they conceived the initial summit of the Group of Six (G6) in 1975.[5]

In discussions regarding Africa during the 34th G8 Summit, the G8 leaders set a five-year deadline to commit US$60 billion in funding to help fight disease in Africa and renewed a commitment made three years earlier to double aid for Africa to $25-billion by 2010 and to consider pledging further assistance after 2010.[6] On the topic of global warming, the G8 leaders agreed on the need for the world to cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming by at least 50 percent by 2050. Environmental activists and leaders from the developing countries described the statement as a "toothless gesture".[6] Results of discussions on the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which had earlier been leaked by WikiLeaks,[7] were not known. The G8 leaders made statements regarding their relations with Zimbabwe,[8] Iran and North Korea.[6] The responses of the G8 leaders to the "Challenge to the G8 Governments" of over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals requesting them to "cancel all illegitimate debt", to "end the practice of using loans and debt cancellation to impose conditionalities" and to "facilitate the return of stolen assets kept in the banks in the G8 countries" are not presently known.[9] Regarding the 2007–2008 world food price crisis, the differences between the G8 leaders and the citizens' groups' approaches to solving the crisis appeared unresolved. The G8's communiqué said that it was "imperative" to remove export restrictions,[6] in contrast to requests of the signers of the "Challenge to the G8 Governments".[9]

The G8 summits during the 21st-century have also involved widespread parallel debates and protests by citizens[10] and claimed human rights violations against some of them during massive police/military[11] operations. Over 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started[12] and nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership were detained at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours.[13][14] During a "non-violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place" according to a legal observer, at least four people were arrested, including a Reuters cameraman.[15] At this venue, amongst the reasons cited for demonstrations and protests were that a G8 summit is merely an arbitrary meeting of national leaders[16] and that it is also a nexus which becomes more than the sum of its parts, elevating the participants, the event and the venue as focal points for activist pressure.[17]

Leaders at the summit

The G8 is an unofficial annual forum for the leaders of Canada, the European Commission, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States.[4]

The 34th G8 summit was the first summit for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev,[18] and was the last summit for U.S. President George W. Bush.[19] It was also the first and only summit for Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda.[20] Fukuda resigned as Japan's Prime Minister on September 1, and he being the first of the G8 leaders at the summit to leave office.[21]

French President Nicolas Sarkozy observed, "I think it is not reasonable to continue to meet as eight to solve the big questions of the world, forgetting China -- one billion 300 million people -- and not inviting India -- one billion people."[22] Japan and the United States announced opposition to Sarkozy's implied suggestion.[23]

Participants

 
Family photo of the G8+G5

These summit participants are the current "core members" of the international forum:[24][25][26][27][28][29][30][31][32][33][34][35][36][37][38][39][40][41][42]

Core G8 members
Host state and leader are shown in bold text.
Member Represented by Title
  Canada Stephen Harper Prime Minister
  France Nicolas Sarkozy President
  Germany Angela Merkel Chancellor
  Italy Silvio Berlusconi Prime Minister
  Japan Yasuo Fukuda Prime Minister
  Russia Dmitry Medvedev President
  United Kingdom Gordon Brown Prime Minister
  United States George W. Bush President
  European Union José Manuel Barroso Commission President
Nicolas Sarkozy Council President
G8+5 Invitees (Countries)
Member Represented by Title
  Brazil Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva President
  China Hu Jintao President
  India Manmohan Singh Prime Minister
  Mexico Felipe Calderón President
  South Africa Kgalema Motlanthe President
Limited Guest Invitees (Countries)
Member Represented by Title
  Algeria Abdelaziz Bouteflika President
  Australia Kevin Rudd Prime Minister
  Ethiopia Meles Zenawi Prime Minister
  Ghana John Kufuor President
  Indonesia Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono President
  Nigeria Umaru Musa Yar'Adua President
  Senegal Abdoulaye Wade President
  South Korea Lee Myung-bak President
  Tanzania Jakaya Kikwete President
Guest Invitees (International Institutions)
Member Represented by Title
African Union Jean Ping Commission Chairman
Jakaya Kikwete Chairperson
  Commonwealth of Independent States Sergey Lebedev Executive Secretary
  International Atomic Energy Agency Mohamed ElBaradei Director General
International Energy Agency Nobuo Tanaka Executive Director
  United Nations Ban Ki-moon Secretary-General
  UNESCO Kōichirō Matsuura Director-General
  World Bank Robert Zoellick President
  World Health Organization Margaret Chan Director-General
World Trade Organization Pascal Lamy Director-General

Priorities

Traditionally, the host country of the G8 summit sets the agenda for negotiations, which take place primarily amongst multi-national civil servants in the weeks before the summit itself, leading to a joint declaration which all countries can agree to sign. This year, leaders of the G8 hoped to find common ground on climate change, the global economy and a host of political crises.[6]

Issues

The summit was intended as a venue for resolving differences among its members. As a practical matter, the summit was also conceived as an opportunity for its members to give each other mutual encouragement in the face of difficult economic decisions.[5]

Africa

 
U.S. President Bush meets Tanzanian President Kikwete

The G8 leaders were in a position to discuss the "full range of issues relating to African development".[43] The need to address long-term planning for African development has been a G8 agenda item for a number of years. In 2008, Japan hosted both the G8 summit and the Fourth Tokyo International Conference on African Development (TICAD-IV) -— a pentannual (recurring in five-year cycles) meeting for African leaders and their development partners. This meant that Japan had the opportunity to help Africa into the spotlight of international attention.[44] Africa, which has been on the G8 agenda since 2000 when Japan last chaired the G8, has continued to lag behind on progress towards meeting Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) while Asia has made considerable strides during the same period. Unanswered questions remain about why what has happened in Asia has not happened in Africa.[45]

After discussions, the G8 leaders announced new measures on improving education, health, water supplies and sanitation and increasing the number of doctors and nurses in Africa. However, the Times says that it will be by the presence, or absence, of a headline figure on overall African aid that their talks will be judged a success or failure. Fukuda and Brown are reported to be pressing for the fulfillment of pledges made at the 2005 Gleneagles summit, but Sarkozy and Berlusconi are seen to be for pulling back from those commitments.[46]

The G8 leaders set a five-year deadline to commit $60-billion in funding to help Africa fight disease, including pledging 100 million mosquito nets by 2010 which will prevent thousands of deaths from malaria. They also renewed a commitment made three years ago to double aid for Africa to $25-billion by 2010 and to consider pledging further assistance after 2010.[6]

Climate change

The G8 leaders claimed that they would discuss the "full range of issues relating to climate".[47]

A package of proposals has been developed for further discussion including "a new framework that will ensure participation by the United States and China, the world's largest greenhouse-gas emitters." The G8 conference is claimed by G8 organisers to be "an important platform to firm up commitments" based on the initial framework agreed upon at the December 2007 United Nations Climate Change Conference held in Bali, Indonesia.[45]

In the "Challenge to the G8 Governments" by over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals, critics of the G8 claimed that the G8 states are themselves responsible for the climate crisis. They called for the G8 governments to "stop financing projects and policies that contribute to climate change".[9]

G8 leaders agreed on the need for the world to cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming by at least 50 percent by 2050 and for each nation to set its own target for near term goals. The communiqué represents a small step forward from last year's call to "consider seriously" such long-term cuts; but environmental activists and leaders from the developing countries were disappointed, describing the statement as a toothless gesture.[6]

The impact of climate change on small Pacific Island nations will also be an "unofficial theme" of the G8 summit, according to a report by the Asahi Evening News.[48] Japan had unveiled a plan called the Cool Earth Partnership in June 2008 in order to help small Pacific states and other developing nations cope with the challenges of climate change.[48] An official for the Japanese Ministry of the Environment stated that it wanted to unveil the new aid package before the G8 Summit in order to further dialogue on the subject.[48] Tavau Teii, the Deputy Prime Minister of Tuvalu, a recipient of Japan's aid package against rising sea levels, toured Japan in the run up to the G8 Summit to raise awareness on the impact of climate change on his small island country.[48][49]

Intellectual property rights

A leaked document [7] detailed the provisions of a proposed plurilateral trade agreement which would impose strict enforcement of intellectual property rights related to Internet activity and trade in information-based goods. If adopted, a treaty of this form would impose a strong, top-down enforcement regime imposing new cooperation requirements upon ISPs, including perfunctory disclosure of customer information, as well as measures restricting the use of online privacy tools. The proposal also specifies a plan to encourage developing nations to accept the legal regime. Talking points from the European Commission, the Office of the United States Trade Representative, the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade, and others have published selected passages ostensibly from this document.[50]

Political issues

Amongst the important issues which were open for discussion included terrorism and nuclear non-proliferation.[51]

  • Zimbabwe: The G8 communiqué expressed "grave concern" about the violence-marred election process which superficially confirmed Robert Mugabe's continuing hold on the presidency. They warned of further action including targeted sanctions against those in Mugabe's government who were behind the violence. The leaders jointly recommended the appointment of a UN special envoy.[6] Gordon Brown pressed for a statement which would have labeled Mugabe an illegitimate president, and George Bush described last month's violent presidential election as a "sham". However, there was no unanimity amongst the G8; and Russia quietly signaled opposition to imposing further sanctions against Mugabe's regime.[52]
  • Iran: The G8 communiqué urged the Iranian government to end its uranium enrichment program in line with UN Security Council resolutions; and they formally called on Tehran to respond positively to international mediation.[6]
  • North Korea: The G8 communiqué encouraged North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons and to cooperate in the verification of its dossier of nuclear programmes. In support for a key concern of the Japanese government, the G8 leaders also urged progress in resolving unanswered questions about North Korea's abductions of Japanese civilians in the 1970s and 1980s.[6]

World economy

The Summit Website highlights several key issues surrounding the world economy to be discussed, including: sustained growth of the world economy, investment, trade, protection of intellectual property rights, emerging economies and natural resources.[51]

The requests to the G8 governments expressed in the "Challenge to the G8 Governments" by over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals regarding the world economy were to "cancel all illegitimate debt", "end the practice of using loans and debt cancellation to impose conditionalities" and "facilitate the return of stolen assets kept in the banks in the G8 countries."[9]

Food crisis

Regarding the 2007–2008 world food price crisis, over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals issued a "Challenge to the G8 Governments" which called for the G8 to "respect efforts to reverse the harmful policies that have led to the food crisis" and for the G8 to "ban speculation on food prices".[9]

G8 leaders called on those nations with sufficient food stocks to release some of their reserves to help others cope with soaring prices; and the G8's mildly worded communiqué said it was "imperative" to remove export restrictions.[6]

Schedule and agenda

 
Family photo of the G8 heads of delegations

A tentative schedule for the G8 summit was arranged in advance; and contingencies affecting some surrounding events were anticipated by the summit planners.[53]

July 5

Saturday's agenda included the following:[53]

  • Peace Walk by activists, including anti-G8 protesters in Sapporo, Hokkaido.[54]

July 6

Sunday's agenda included the following:[53]

  • Non-government organizations hold "People's Summit" in Sapporo, Hokkaido (to July 8).[55]
  • Bush-Fukuda bilateral meeting,[56] US-Japan summit.[57]
  • Harper-Fukuda bilateral meeting,[58] Canada-Japan summit.[59]
  • U.S.-Japan leaders dinner.[53]

July 7

The first official day of meetings in Tōyako focused on African development issues. The exchange of views were aired in a number of bilateral meetings and in an expanded afternoon session which brought together the G8 leaders and leaders of seven African countries -- Algeria, Ethiopia, Ghana, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania and the chairman of the African Union Commission. Monday's agenda included the following:[53]

  • Merkel-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[60]
  • Medvedev-Brown bilateral meeting.[61]
  • Medvedev-Merkel bilateral meeting.[61]
  • Medvedev-Sarkozy bilateral meeting.[61]
  • Medvedev-Bush bilateral meeting.[62]
  • Outreach Working Lunch: G8 leaders + 8 African leaders.[63]
  • Outreach Working Session: G8 leaders + 8 African leaders.[63]
  • Mbeki-Bush bilateral meeting.[64]
  • Mbeki-Fukuda bilateral meeting,[64] South Africa–Japan summit.[65]
  • Bouteflika-Sarkozy bilateral meeting.[66]
  • Bouteflika-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[67]
  • Yar'Adua-Fukuda bilateral meeting,[42] Nigeria-Japan summit.[68]
  • Brown-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[69]
  • G8 Social Event (Tanabata-related event)[63]
  • G8 Social Dinner.[70]

July 8

The second day of meetings in Tōyako focused on the food crisis, oil prices, and climate change. Tuesday's agenda included the following:[53]

  • Merkel-Bush bilateral meeting.[71]
  • G8 Morning Working Session.[63]
  • G8 Working Lunch.[63]
  • G8 Afternoon Working Session.[63]
  • Meeting of the "+5" countries (G8+5) in Sapporo ahead of Wednesday' morning session (Brazil, China, India, Mexico, and South Africa)
  • Medvedev-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[72]
  • Berlusconi-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[73]
  • G8 Working Dinner.[63]
  • Hu-Lula bilateral meeting[74]
  • Hu-Mbeki bilateral meeting[75]
  • Hu-Singh bilateral meeting[76]

July 9

The third day of the summit was devoted to crafting summary statements to describe some of the substantive issues which were discussed by the leaders. Wednesday's schedule included two morning sessions. An outreach meeting in the early morning brought together G8 leaders and the leaders of Brazil, China, India, Mexico, South Africa. There was a separate meeting for G8 leaders and leaders of "major economies" -- Australia, Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, Mexico, South Africa and South Korea. Wednesday's agenda encompassed the following:[53]

  • Singh-Bush bilateral meeting.[77]
  • Outreach Working Session.[63]
  • Major Economies Meeting.[63]
  • G8 Working Lunch with participants from Major Economies Meeting.[63]
  • Hu-Bush bilateral meeting.[78]
  • Hu-Medvedev bilateral meeting[79]
  • Hu-Harper bilateral meeting[80]
  • Hu-Sarkozy bilateral meeting[81]
  • Press Conference.[82]
  • Lee-Bush bilateral meeting.[83]
  • Hu-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[84]
  • Singh-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[85]
  • Calderon-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[86]
  • Lula da Silva-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[87]
  • Rudd-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[88]
  • Yudhoyono-Fukuda bilateral meeting.[89]
  • Singh-Medvedev bilateral meeting.[77]
  • Singh-Rudd bilateral meeting.[77]

NGO response

International development NGOs[90] and networks reacted with a mixture of disappointment and frustration to the final communiqué of the July 2008 G8 summit in Hokkaido, Japan.

60,000 British citizens and 1,000,000 people worldwide had signed petitions calling on G8 leaders to resolve the food crisis, address climate change, deliver funds for water and sanitation, and provide aid for healthcare and education.

However, concrete plans from the G8 to deliver action on these vital concerns were not forthcoming.

Food crisis

The G8 registered their deep concern about the current global food crisis, but did not announce tangible or measurable initiatives for tackling it.

According to World Vision the $10 billion pledged since January will make a difference in the short term. Tearfund see the appointment of a G8 Expert Group to monitor the implementation of food security commitments as a positive step, although the lack of measurable plans adopted means that it is unclear exactly what role this group will play.

Many NGOs report that the G8 did not address the structural causes of the food crisis. Instead of delivering trade justice, G8 leaders pushed for even more trade liberalisation for developing countries. The G8 also remained silent on the role of food-price speculation in global markets in making the crisis worse. They also used only vague words on reducing bio-fuels and addressing climate change.

Climate change

The G8 pledged to cut CO
2
emissions by half by 2050. However NGOs including CAFOD, ActionAid, Christian Aid, Oxfam and Save the Children all argue that this is not credible, because there is no agreed baseline year, no agreement on when emissions will peak and begin to decline and no mid-term target on emissions reductions.

$6 billion was pledged to a ‘Climate Investment Fund’. However Christian Aid points out two problems with this. Firstly, the fund will be housed at the World Bank, which has a track record of imposing damaging economic policies on poor countries and is backing a large portfolio of greenhouse gas emitting projects around the world. Secondly, this is not new money - the money will come out of aid budgets, at a time when aid budgets are decreasing.

Water and sanitation

The international alliance End Water Poverty reports that hopes of a breakthrough in the global sanitation and water crisis at the G8 summit were dashed as the G8 delivered a communiqué largely devoid of concrete actions to help the 2.6 billion people lacking access to a safe toilet, and the 1.1 billion people lacking access to clean water. Instead of agreeing an action plan to tackle what a recent WaterAid report claims kills more children than any other single factor, G8 leaders were content to report on progress at the 2009 summit and take steps to implement the discredited 2003 G8 Evian Water Action Plan.

Aid for healthcare and education

Tearfund welcomed the fact that G8 leaders committed to provide a projected $60 billion for health over the next 5 years. However, they point out that this falls far short of what is required to achieve the health-related MDGs and Universal Access by 2010. Based on current UNAIDS resource estimates, the G8 share of resources needed for HIV alone is US$65 billion for the next three years. Meanwhile, previous commitments, such as universal access to paediatric treatment, as outlined at Heiligendamm in 2007, are conspicuous by their absence.

There are no timetables for delivery or measurable action plans attached to the communiqué. G8 leaders have agreed to establish a monitoring mechanism but the details remain unclear. Without funding, timetables and monitoring mechanisms, the G8 leaders’ stated concerns about global health will be empty gestures.

According to the Global Campaign for Education, there has been a pledge of $1 billion for education, yet this is less than 10% of what is needed to deliver what is every child’s human right.

Citizens' responses and authorities' counter-responses

Over 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started[12] and nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership were detained at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours.[13][14] During a "non-violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place" according to a legal observer, at least four people were arrested, including a Reuters cameraman.[15]

Protesters and demonstrations

Protests at the Summit
 
Antiglobalist demonstration march.
 
Many of the groups planning protests were coordinated through the G8 Action Network.[10]

Not all demonstrations were agitating in opposition to some issue. At the 2005 Scotland summit, for the first time the tens of thousands of people protesting outside were actually supporting the summit's agenda of African aid;[3] and some activists travelled to Hokkaido for the same purpose. Veteran British actor and Oxfam activist Bill Nighy in Sapporo explained succinctly: "We want to achieve exactly what we wanted to achieve last time [at Heiligendamm, Germany], which is to keep the G8 leaders and their governments to their promise. The promise that they would fulfil the Millennium Development Goals: primary school education for everyone; HIV medicines for all the people that are requiring it; maternal health; sustainable environment. We simply want them not to renege on those promises and to keep it up to schedule. At the moment, they are disastrously behind schedule. So we are looking to remind them of that."[91]

Some protesting organizations in Sapporo during the G8 summit tried to leverage the spirit of the Japanese Tanabata festival to focus attention on what they hope this summit will accomplish.[55] In the evening of July 7, the G8 leaders were invited to create their own tanzaku, and the group was captured by the summit photographer in front of the bamboo on which their private wishes had been tied. The same theme was exploited by non-governmental organizations like Oxfam and CARE International in setting up an online wish petition campaign to coincide with the G8 Summit and Tanabata.[92]

Human rights violations and border controls

One day before the G8 Finance Ministers' Meeting started in Osaka with a very large police presence, a day labourer in Kamagasaki was allegedly tortured by the police. In response, many day labourers and other local citizens carried out several days of street protests.[citation needed]

During the month before the 34th G8 Summit started, "over 40 people were arrested in pre-emptive sweeps of broad left and anarchist groups".[12]

Just preceding the summit, Via Campesina complained about the detention for over 24 hours of 19 (or 20) Korean farmers at New Chitose Airport and their likely deportation from Japan, stating that the farmers were travelling with an official invitation letter from Nouminren (Japanese Family Farmers' Movement) and a full programme of their planned activities as requested by the authorities. Via Campesina asserted the "right to meet, demonstrate and propose solutions to the problems facing humanity and the environment" and demanded that "all the farmers, workers and other activists detained at the Sapporo Airport be allowed to join the civil society activities parallel to the G8 Summit."[13][14]

During a "non-violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place, or even appeared likely to take place" according to Ko Watari, a legal observer, at least four people were arrested, including a Reuters cameraman. The arrestees potentially face "years in prison" according to the "No! G8 Legal Team".[15]

Citizen journalism

Citizens' groups organized several citizen journalism centres to provide independent media coverage of the expected protests.[93] In a sense, this text is the work product of something like citizen journalism, creating this article as part of "the first rough draft of history."[94]

Accomplishments

 
G8 "family photo" at the Hokkaido summit. From left are: Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of Italy; President Dmitry Medvedev of Russia; Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany; Prime Minister Gordon Brown of the United Kingdom; Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda of Japan; President George W. Bush of the United States; Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada; President Nicolas Sarkozy of France, and José Manuel Barroso, President of the European Commission

The composition of the G8 summit is not an agenda item, but wanted to see the group expand to include China, Mexico, India, Brazil and other major economies like Australia, South Korea and Spain. The G8 summit is an international event which is observed and reported by news media, but the G8's continuing relevance after more than 30 years is somewhat unclear.[95] More than one analyst suggests that a G-8 summit is not the place to flesh out the details of any difficult or controversial policy issue in the context of a three-day event.[96] Rather, the meeting offers an opportunity to bring a range of complex and sometimes inter-related issues. The G8 summit brings leaders together "not so they can dream up quick fixes, but to talk and think about them together."[97]

Analysts anticipate that this will not be a summit in which an ambitious new agenda is mapped out, but rather one which will be cautiously focused on trying to keep the lid on growing global discontent.[18] In 1976, the first year Canada attended, the nations issued a 1,600-word statement that made seven commitments, none of which were ever fully delivered by the members. In 2007, the nations made 329 commitments, about a third of which are being turned into reality. This, defenders of the G8 say, is proof of the summits' continuing effectiveness: the G8 are generally doing a better job than ever before of delivering on pledges made at these annual summit meetings.[3]

The projected evaluation of this G8 summit can be assessed or measured in a context which encompasses the most recent G8 summits. At the 2004 summit at Sea Island in United States, the G8 leaders agreed to extend debt relief programs for poor countries, but fell short of demands for a total write-off of loans owed by African nations to multilateral lending agencies. The G8 leaders said they would extend the term of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries initiative, under which poor states can write off some of their debt. A summary of accomplishments from the three most recent G8 summits would include:[98]

2005 summit. In Gleneagles in Scotland, the G8 leaders agreed to more than double aid to Africa by 2010; but aid agencies argued there was little new money in the pledge. They also pledged that G8 nations and other donors would increase total aid for all developing countries by about $50 billion a year by 2010. Assistance to Africa was put at the top of the 2005 summit by British Prime Minister Tony Blair;[99] but those well-intentioned plans were thwarted because Blair was forced to return to London after terrorist bomb explosions disrupted London's public transportation. The discussion about African issues was not as fruitful as the regular G8 sessions and had a "fragmented" character. A credible analysis of the summit suggests that Gleneagles stands apart from the other G8 summits ...

It would have been a regular summit if not for the terrorist attacks on London, as odd as it may seem at first sight. Although the tragedy took away a considerable portion of attention that would have otherwise been directed to the world richest and most powerful countries ..., the attacks provided for the relative success of the summit ... due to the necessity to demonstrate the united front against terrorism and to achieve somewhat tangible results that terrorists could not prevent.[100]

2006 summit. In Saint Petersburg in Russia, the G8 leaders agreed to a formal agenda of energy security, combating infectious diseases and promoting education—all topics held little controversy and required no financial commitment by G8 members. Assistance to Africa from the 2005 summit agenda re-appeared on the 2006 agenda;[99] but no tangible actions ensued.[98]

2007 summit. In Heiligendamm in Germany, the G8 leaders agreed to consider a global goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and to negotiate a new global climate pact that would extend and broaden the Kyoto Protocols.[101] For Africa, the G8 pledged $60 billion to fight AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis;[99] but the declaration set out no specific timetable, nor did it break down individual countries' contributions or spell out how much of the total funds had been previously promised.[98]

Infrastructure Consortium for Africa

The Infrastructure Consortium for Africa (ICA) was established at the 31st G8 summit at Gleneagles, Scotland in the United Kingdom in 2005. Since that time, the ICA’s annual meeting is traditionally hosted by the country holding the Presidency of the G8. The 2008 meeting was held in Tokyo in March 2008.[102]

Budget

 
Main venue Windsor Hotel Toya Resort & Spa

Japan spent an unprecedented amount on hosting the G-8 Summit.[103] Although a full accounting has not been announced, the estimated total budget was more than ¥60 billion:

  • ¥30 billion (£283 million; $561 million) used by the National Police Agency for patrolling the venues, including taking counter-terrorism measures.[104] When the three-day meeting ends, Japanese taxpayers will face a bill which dwarfs the estimated £1.3m Britain stumped up at Gleneagles three years ago. A foreign ministry spokesman suggested that "the number of parties attending this year is unprecedented, which has admittedly complicated the arrangements, and it's simply not fair to compare it with previous summits."[105]
  • ¥25.5 billion will be spent by the Foreign Ministry.[103]
    1. approximately ¥9 billion for communications infrastructure between the summit venue in Toyako and Rusutsu, where the international media center will be located.
    2. approximately ¥5 billion for the media center, which is constructed on a parking lot in a ski resort and will accommodate around 3,000 people from the press and governments. Inside and outside the center, cutting-edge environmental technology, including fuel cells and heat pumps, will be exhibited. The center itself boasts eco-friendly features, including solar panels, "green" walls and a snow cooling system. Once the summit is over, however, the building will be demolished.
  • ¥1 billion each for The Defense Ministry and Japan Coast Guard for transporting the leaders and patrolling sea areas near the venue and monitoring the 46 km no-fly zone surrounding the summit site.[104]

The Times reports that the estimated cost of the Hokkaidō summit topped $285 million.[106]

Notable statistics

Delegates

Security
 
Security Police undertaking VIP duties in Hokkaido.
 
Security Police in a Mercedes-Benz S600. A placard in the window shows these SP officers are escorting the South Korea delegation.

With more than 2,000 delegates in total, it is the largest G8 summit ever. Besides the leaders of the G8 nations attending, there are the government leaders of seven African nations and representatives from the five developing countries. Also in attendance are leaders from Australia, Indonesia and South Korea.[107]

Logistics

  • Media: There are approximately 4,000 journalists covering the summit from a specially built ¥2.8-billion ($25.92-million), media center. One hundred antennas were put up for mobile phones.[107]
  • Site: The world leaders are staying at Windsor Hotel Toya Resort, located on the peak of the 625 m tall Mount Poromoi, overlooking Lake Tōya.[107]
  • Security: There are more than 20,000 police providing ground-based security.[107] Military security includes 4 fighter jets, AWACS reconnaissance, 12 warships and Patriot surface-to-air-missiles.[citation needed]
  • Human rights: Over 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started.[12] At least 4 people were arrested, including a Reuters cameraman, during what a legal observer claimed was a "non-violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place."[15]
  • Freedom of speech: Nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership and expected to participate in citizens' debates were detained by the Japanese authorities at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours and were expected to be deported.[13][14]
  • Cost: The total cost of the three-day summit has been estimated at ¥60-billion.[107]
  • Food: Fifty chefs from 23 local hotels are creating special meals using 105 different local products;[107] and the first night banquet featured 19 dishes.[70] Expressed differently, the summit leaders enjoyed a six-course lunch followed by an eight-course dinner.[107]
  • NGOs: More than 140 non-government organizations are holding an alternative summit in the prefectural capital of Sapporo.[107]

Business opportunity

For some, the G8 summit became a profit-generating event; as for example, the G8 Summit magazine which has been published under the auspices of the host nations for distribution to all attendees since 1998.[108]

Hokkaido's small businesses which were located near the summit site discovered that most of their customers were policemen during the event; and the tourist trade was virtually dead." The Guardian reported one shop owner's terse point of view: "I just want to get this summit over and done with so we can get back to normal."[105]

In contrast, a foreign ministry spokesman focused on the exposure Toyako [Lake Toya] received in the international media; and he argued that the short-term sacrifice would prove to be worthwhile in terms of long-term business opportunities.[105]

Gallery

Core G8 participants

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Nicholas Bayne; Robert D. Putnam (2000). Hanging in there: the G7 and G8 summit in maturity and renewal. Ashgate Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-1185-1.
  • Nicholas Bayne (2005). Staying together: the G8 summit confronts the 21st century. Ashgate Pub Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-4267-1.
  • Peter I. Hajnal (2007). The G8 system and the G20: evolution, role and documentation. Ashgate Pub Co. ISBN 978-0-7546-4550-4.
  • Glenn D. Hook (2005-09-28). Japan's international relations: politics, economics and security. RoutledgeCurzon. ISBN 978-0-415-33637-6.
  • Bob Reinalda (1998). Autonomous policy making by international organizations. Psychology Press. ISBN 978-0-415-16486-3.

External links

34th, summit, held, town, tōyako, hokkaido, japan, july, 2008, locations, previous, summits, hosted, japan, include, tokyo, 1979, 1986, 1993, nago, okinawa, 2000, summit, evolved, beyond, being, gathering, world, political, leaders, become, occasion, wide, var. The 34th G8 summit was held in the town of Tōyako Hokkaido Japan on July 7 9 2008 1 The locations of previous summits hosted by Japan include Tokyo 1979 1986 1993 and Nago Okinawa 2000 The G8 Summit has evolved beyond being a gathering of world political leaders to become an occasion for a wide variety of non governmental organizations activists and civic groups to congregate and discuss a multitude of issues 2 34th G8 SummitHokkaido Toyako Summit34th G8 Summit official logoHost country JapanDatesJuly 7 9 2008Follows33rd G8 summitPrecedes35th G8 summit Contents 1 Overview 2 Leaders at the summit 2 1 Participants 3 Priorities 4 Issues 4 1 Africa 4 2 Climate change 4 3 Intellectual property rights 4 4 Political issues 4 5 World economy 4 6 Food crisis 5 Schedule and agenda 5 1 July 5 5 2 July 6 5 3 July 7 5 4 July 8 5 5 July 9 6 NGO response 6 1 Food crisis 6 2 Climate change 6 3 Water and sanitation 6 4 Aid for healthcare and education 7 Citizens responses and authorities counter responses 7 1 Protesters and demonstrations 7 2 Human rights violations and border controls 7 3 Citizen journalism 8 Accomplishments 8 1 Infrastructure Consortium for Africa 9 Budget 10 Notable statistics 10 1 Delegates 10 2 Logistics 11 Business opportunity 12 Gallery 12 1 Core G8 participants 13 See also 14 References 15 Further reading 16 External linksOverview EditThe Group of Seven G7 was an unofficial forum which brought together the heads of the richest industrialized countries France Germany Italy Japan the United Kingdom the United States and Canada starting in 1976 The Group of Eight G8 meeting for the first time in 1997 was formed with the addition of Russia 3 In addition the President of the European Commission has been formally included in summits since 1981 4 The summits were not meant to be linked formally with wider international institutions and in fact a mild rebellion against the stiff formality of other international meetings was a part of the genesis of cooperation between France s President Giscard d Estaing and West Germany s Chancellor Helmut Schmidt as they conceived the initial summit of the Group of Six G6 in 1975 5 In discussions regarding Africa during the 34th G8 Summit the G8 leaders set a five year deadline to commit US 60 billion in funding to help fight disease in Africa and renewed a commitment made three years earlier to double aid for Africa to 25 billion by 2010 and to consider pledging further assistance after 2010 6 On the topic of global warming the G8 leaders agreed on the need for the world to cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming by at least 50 percent by 2050 Environmental activists and leaders from the developing countries described the statement as a toothless gesture 6 Results of discussions on the Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement which had earlier been leaked by WikiLeaks 7 were not known The G8 leaders made statements regarding their relations with Zimbabwe 8 Iran and North Korea 6 The responses of the G8 leaders to the Challenge to the G8 Governments of over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals requesting them to cancel all illegitimate debt to end the practice of using loans and debt cancellation to impose conditionalities and to facilitate the return of stolen assets kept in the banks in the G8 countries are not presently known 9 Regarding the 2007 2008 world food price crisis the differences between the G8 leaders and the citizens groups approaches to solving the crisis appeared unresolved The G8 s communique said that it was imperative to remove export restrictions 6 in contrast to requests of the signers of the Challenge to the G8 Governments 9 The G8 summits during the 21st century have also involved widespread parallel debates and protests by citizens 10 and claimed human rights violations against some of them during massive police military 11 operations Over 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started 12 and nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership were detained at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours 13 14 During a non violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place according to a legal observer at least four people were arrested including a Reuters cameraman 15 At this venue amongst the reasons cited for demonstrations and protests were that a G8 summit is merely an arbitrary meeting of national leaders 16 and that it is also a nexus which becomes more than the sum of its parts elevating the participants the event and the venue as focal points for activist pressure 17 Leaders at the summit EditThe G8 is an unofficial annual forum for the leaders of Canada the European Commission France Germany Italy Japan Russia the United Kingdom and the United States 4 The 34th G8 summit was the first summit for British Prime Minister Gordon Brown and Russian President Dmitry Medvedev 18 and was the last summit for U S President George W Bush 19 It was also the first and only summit for Japanese Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda 20 Fukuda resigned as Japan s Prime Minister on September 1 and he being the first of the G8 leaders at the summit to leave office 21 French President Nicolas Sarkozy observed I think it is not reasonable to continue to meet as eight to solve the big questions of the world forgetting China one billion 300 million people and not inviting India one billion people 22 Japan and the United States announced opposition to Sarkozy s implied suggestion 23 Participants Edit Family photo of the G8 G5 These summit participants are the current core members of the international forum 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 Core G8 membersHost state and leader are shown in bold text Member Represented by Title Canada Stephen Harper Prime Minister France Nicolas Sarkozy President Germany Angela Merkel Chancellor Italy Silvio Berlusconi Prime Minister Japan Yasuo Fukuda Prime Minister Russia Dmitry Medvedev President United Kingdom Gordon Brown Prime Minister United States George W Bush President European Union Jose Manuel Barroso Commission PresidentNicolas Sarkozy Council PresidentG8 5 Invitees Countries Member Represented by Title Brazil Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva President China Hu Jintao President India Manmohan Singh Prime Minister Mexico Felipe Calderon President South Africa Kgalema Motlanthe PresidentLimited Guest Invitees Countries Member Represented by Title Algeria Abdelaziz Bouteflika President Australia Kevin Rudd Prime Minister Ethiopia Meles Zenawi Prime Minister Ghana John Kufuor President Indonesia Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono President Nigeria Umaru Musa Yar Adua President Senegal Abdoulaye Wade President South Korea Lee Myung bak President Tanzania Jakaya Kikwete PresidentGuest Invitees International Institutions Member Represented by TitleAfrican Union Jean Ping Commission ChairmanJakaya Kikwete Chairperson Commonwealth of Independent States Sergey Lebedev Executive Secretary International Atomic Energy Agency Mohamed ElBaradei Director GeneralInternational Energy Agency Nobuo Tanaka Executive Director United Nations Ban Ki moon Secretary General UNESCO Kōichirō Matsuura Director General World Bank Robert Zoellick President World Health Organization Margaret Chan Director GeneralWorld Trade Organization Pascal Lamy Director GeneralPriorities EditTraditionally the host country of the G8 summit sets the agenda for negotiations which take place primarily amongst multi national civil servants in the weeks before the summit itself leading to a joint declaration which all countries can agree to sign This year leaders of the G8 hoped to find common ground on climate change the global economy and a host of political crises 6 Issues EditThe summit was intended as a venue for resolving differences among its members As a practical matter the summit was also conceived as an opportunity for its members to give each other mutual encouragement in the face of difficult economic decisions 5 Africa Edit U S President Bush meets Tanzanian President Kikwete The G8 leaders were in a position to discuss the full range of issues relating to African development 43 The need to address long term planning for African development has been a G8 agenda item for a number of years In 2008 Japan hosted both the G8 summit and the Fourth Tokyo International Conference on African Development TICAD IV a pentannual recurring in five year cycles meeting for African leaders and their development partners This meant that Japan had the opportunity to help Africa into the spotlight of international attention 44 Africa which has been on the G8 agenda since 2000 when Japan last chaired the G8 has continued to lag behind on progress towards meeting Millennium Development Goals MDGs while Asia has made considerable strides during the same period Unanswered questions remain about why what has happened in Asia has not happened in Africa 45 After discussions the G8 leaders announced new measures on improving education health water supplies and sanitation and increasing the number of doctors and nurses in Africa However the Times says that it will be by the presence or absence of a headline figure on overall African aid that their talks will be judged a success or failure Fukuda and Brown are reported to be pressing for the fulfillment of pledges made at the 2005 Gleneagles summit but Sarkozy and Berlusconi are seen to be for pulling back from those commitments 46 The G8 leaders set a five year deadline to commit 60 billion in funding to help Africa fight disease including pledging 100 million mosquito nets by 2010 which will prevent thousands of deaths from malaria They also renewed a commitment made three years ago to double aid for Africa to 25 billion by 2010 and to consider pledging further assistance after 2010 6 Climate change Edit The G8 leaders claimed that they would discuss the full range of issues relating to climate 47 A package of proposals has been developed for further discussion including a new framework that will ensure participation by the United States and China the world s largest greenhouse gas emitters The G8 conference is claimed by G8 organisers to be an important platform to firm up commitments based on the initial framework agreed upon at the December 2007 United Nations Climate Change Conference held in Bali Indonesia 45 In the Challenge to the G8 Governments by over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals critics of the G8 claimed that the G8 states are themselves responsible for the climate crisis They called for the G8 governments to stop financing projects and policies that contribute to climate change 9 G8 leaders agreed on the need for the world to cut carbon emissions blamed for global warming by at least 50 percent by 2050 and for each nation to set its own target for near term goals The communique represents a small step forward from last year s call to consider seriously such long term cuts but environmental activists and leaders from the developing countries were disappointed describing the statement as a toothless gesture 6 The impact of climate change on small Pacific Island nations will also be an unofficial theme of the G8 summit according to a report by the Asahi Evening News 48 Japan had unveiled a plan called the Cool Earth Partnership in June 2008 in order to help small Pacific states and other developing nations cope with the challenges of climate change 48 An official for the Japanese Ministry of the Environment stated that it wanted to unveil the new aid package before the G8 Summit in order to further dialogue on the subject 48 Tavau Teii the Deputy Prime Minister of Tuvalu a recipient of Japan s aid package against rising sea levels toured Japan in the run up to the G8 Summit to raise awareness on the impact of climate change on his small island country 48 49 Intellectual property rights Edit See also Anti Counterfeiting Trade Agreement A leaked document 7 detailed the provisions of a proposed plurilateral trade agreement which would impose strict enforcement of intellectual property rights related to Internet activity and trade in information based goods If adopted a treaty of this form would impose a strong top down enforcement regime imposing new cooperation requirements upon ISPs including perfunctory disclosure of customer information as well as measures restricting the use of online privacy tools The proposal also specifies a plan to encourage developing nations to accept the legal regime Talking points from the European Commission the Office of the United States Trade Representative the Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade and others have published selected passages ostensibly from this document 50 Political issues Edit Amongst the important issues which were open for discussion included terrorism and nuclear non proliferation 51 Zimbabwe The G8 communique expressed grave concern about the violence marred election process which superficially confirmed Robert Mugabe s continuing hold on the presidency They warned of further action including targeted sanctions against those in Mugabe s government who were behind the violence The leaders jointly recommended the appointment of a UN special envoy 6 Gordon Brown pressed for a statement which would have labeled Mugabe an illegitimate president and George Bush described last month s violent presidential election as a sham However there was no unanimity amongst the G8 and Russia quietly signaled opposition to imposing further sanctions against Mugabe s regime 52 Iran The G8 communique urged the Iranian government to end its uranium enrichment program in line with UN Security Council resolutions and they formally called on Tehran to respond positively to international mediation 6 North Korea The G8 communique encouraged North Korea to abandon nuclear weapons and to cooperate in the verification of its dossier of nuclear programmes In support for a key concern of the Japanese government the G8 leaders also urged progress in resolving unanswered questions about North Korea s abductions of Japanese civilians in the 1970s and 1980s 6 World economy Edit The Summit Website highlights several key issues surrounding the world economy to be discussed including sustained growth of the world economy investment trade protection of intellectual property rights emerging economies and natural resources 51 The requests to the G8 governments expressed in the Challenge to the G8 Governments by over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals regarding the world economy were to cancel all illegitimate debt end the practice of using loans and debt cancellation to impose conditionalities and facilitate the return of stolen assets kept in the banks in the G8 countries 9 Food crisis Edit Regarding the 2007 2008 world food price crisis over 100 NGOs and other organisations and individuals issued a Challenge to the G8 Governments which called for the G8 to respect efforts to reverse the harmful policies that have led to the food crisis and for the G8 to ban speculation on food prices 9 G8 leaders called on those nations with sufficient food stocks to release some of their reserves to help others cope with soaring prices and the G8 s mildly worded communique said it was imperative to remove export restrictions 6 Schedule and agenda Edit Family photo of the G8 heads of delegations A tentative schedule for the G8 summit was arranged in advance and contingencies affecting some surrounding events were anticipated by the summit planners 53 July 5 Edit Saturday s agenda included the following 53 Peace Walk by activists including anti G8 protesters in Sapporo Hokkaido 54 July 6 Edit Sunday s agenda included the following 53 Non government organizations hold People s Summit in Sapporo Hokkaido to July 8 55 Bush Fukuda bilateral meeting 56 US Japan summit 57 Harper Fukuda bilateral meeting 58 Canada Japan summit 59 U S Japan leaders dinner 53 July 7 Edit The first official day of meetings in Tōyako focused on African development issues The exchange of views were aired in a number of bilateral meetings and in an expanded afternoon session which brought together the G8 leaders and leaders of seven African countries Algeria Ethiopia Ghana Nigeria Senegal South Africa Tanzania and the chairman of the African Union Commission Monday s agenda included the following 53 Merkel Fukuda bilateral meeting 60 Medvedev Brown bilateral meeting 61 Medvedev Merkel bilateral meeting 61 Medvedev Sarkozy bilateral meeting 61 Medvedev Bush bilateral meeting 62 Outreach Working Lunch G8 leaders 8 African leaders 63 Outreach Working Session G8 leaders 8 African leaders 63 Mbeki Bush bilateral meeting 64 Mbeki Fukuda bilateral meeting 64 South Africa Japan summit 65 Bouteflika Sarkozy bilateral meeting 66 Bouteflika Fukuda bilateral meeting 67 Yar Adua Fukuda bilateral meeting 42 Nigeria Japan summit 68 Brown Fukuda bilateral meeting 69 G8 Social Event Tanabata related event 63 G8 Social Dinner 70 July 8 Edit Stephen Harper with Manmohan Singh The second day of meetings in Tōyako focused on the food crisis oil prices and climate change Tuesday s agenda included the following 53 Merkel Bush bilateral meeting 71 G8 Morning Working Session 63 G8 Working Lunch 63 G8 Afternoon Working Session 63 Meeting of the 5 countries G8 5 in Sapporo ahead of Wednesday morning session Brazil China India Mexico and South Africa Medvedev Fukuda bilateral meeting 72 Berlusconi Fukuda bilateral meeting 73 G8 Working Dinner 63 Hu Lula bilateral meeting 74 Hu Mbeki bilateral meeting 75 Hu Singh bilateral meeting 76 July 9 Edit The third day of the summit was devoted to crafting summary statements to describe some of the substantive issues which were discussed by the leaders Wednesday s schedule included two morning sessions An outreach meeting in the early morning brought together G8 leaders and the leaders of Brazil China India Mexico South Africa There was a separate meeting for G8 leaders and leaders of major economies Australia Brazil China India Indonesia Mexico South Africa and South Korea Wednesday s agenda encompassed the following 53 Singh Bush bilateral meeting 77 Outreach Working Session 63 Major Economies Meeting 63 G8 Working Lunch with participants from Major Economies Meeting 63 Hu Bush bilateral meeting 78 Hu Medvedev bilateral meeting 79 Hu Harper bilateral meeting 80 Hu Sarkozy bilateral meeting 81 Press Conference 82 Lee Bush bilateral meeting 83 Hu Fukuda bilateral meeting 84 Singh Fukuda bilateral meeting 85 Calderon Fukuda bilateral meeting 86 Lula da Silva Fukuda bilateral meeting 87 Rudd Fukuda bilateral meeting 88 Yudhoyono Fukuda bilateral meeting 89 Singh Medvedev bilateral meeting 77 Singh Rudd bilateral meeting 77 NGO response EditInternational development NGOs 90 and networks reacted with a mixture of disappointment and frustration to the final communique of the July 2008 G8 summit in Hokkaido Japan 60 000 British citizens and 1 000 000 people worldwide had signed petitions calling on G8 leaders to resolve the food crisis address climate change deliver funds for water and sanitation and provide aid for healthcare and education However concrete plans from the G8 to deliver action on these vital concerns were not forthcoming Food crisis Edit The G8 registered their deep concern about the current global food crisis but did not announce tangible or measurable initiatives for tackling it According to World Vision the 10 billion pledged since January will make a difference in the short term Tearfund see the appointment of a G8 Expert Group to monitor the implementation of food security commitments as a positive step although the lack of measurable plans adopted means that it is unclear exactly what role this group will play Many NGOs report that the G8 did not address the structural causes of the food crisis Instead of delivering trade justice G8 leaders pushed for even more trade liberalisation for developing countries The G8 also remained silent on the role of food price speculation in global markets in making the crisis worse They also used only vague words on reducing bio fuels and addressing climate change Climate change Edit The G8 pledged to cut CO2 emissions by half by 2050 However NGOs including CAFOD ActionAid Christian Aid Oxfam and Save the Children all argue that this is not credible because there is no agreed baseline year no agreement on when emissions will peak and begin to decline and no mid term target on emissions reductions 6 billion was pledged to a Climate Investment Fund However Christian Aid points out two problems with this Firstly the fund will be housed at the World Bank which has a track record of imposing damaging economic policies on poor countries and is backing a large portfolio of greenhouse gas emitting projects around the world Secondly this is not new money the money will come out of aid budgets at a time when aid budgets are decreasing Water and sanitation Edit The international alliance End Water Poverty reports that hopes of a breakthrough in the global sanitation and water crisis at the G8 summit were dashed as the G8 delivered a communique largely devoid of concrete actions to help the 2 6 billion people lacking access to a safe toilet and the 1 1 billion people lacking access to clean water Instead of agreeing an action plan to tackle what a recent WaterAid report claims kills more children than any other single factor G8 leaders were content to report on progress at the 2009 summit and take steps to implement the discredited 2003 G8 Evian Water Action Plan Aid for healthcare and education Edit Tearfund welcomed the fact that G8 leaders committed to provide a projected 60 billion for health over the next 5 years However they point out that this falls far short of what is required to achieve the health related MDGs and Universal Access by 2010 Based on current UNAIDS resource estimates the G8 share of resources needed for HIV alone is US 65 billion for the next three years Meanwhile previous commitments such as universal access to paediatric treatment as outlined at Heiligendamm in 2007 are conspicuous by their absence There are no timetables for delivery or measurable action plans attached to the communique G8 leaders have agreed to establish a monitoring mechanism but the details remain unclear Without funding timetables and monitoring mechanisms the G8 leaders stated concerns about global health will be empty gestures According to the Global Campaign for Education there has been a pledge of 1 billion for education yet this is less than 10 of what is needed to deliver what is every child s human right Citizens responses and authorities counter responses EditOver 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started 12 and nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership were detained at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours 13 14 During a non violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place according to a legal observer at least four people were arrested including a Reuters cameraman 15 Protesters and demonstrations Edit Protests at the Summit Antiglobalist demonstration march Many of the groups planning protests were coordinated through the G8 Action Network 10 Not all demonstrations were agitating in opposition to some issue At the 2005 Scotland summit for the first time the tens of thousands of people protesting outside were actually supporting the summit s agenda of African aid 3 and some activists travelled to Hokkaido for the same purpose Veteran British actor and Oxfam activist Bill Nighy in Sapporo explained succinctly We want to achieve exactly what we wanted to achieve last time at Heiligendamm Germany which is to keep the G8 leaders and their governments to their promise The promise that they would fulfil the Millennium Development Goals primary school education for everyone HIV medicines for all the people that are requiring it maternal health sustainable environment We simply want them not to renege on those promises and to keep it up to schedule At the moment they are disastrously behind schedule So we are looking to remind them of that 91 Some protesting organizations in Sapporo during the G8 summit tried to leverage the spirit of the Japanese Tanabata festival to focus attention on what they hope this summit will accomplish 55 In the evening of July 7 the G8 leaders were invited to create their own tanzaku and the group was captured by the summit photographer in front of the bamboo on which their private wishes had been tied The same theme was exploited by non governmental organizations like Oxfam and CARE International in setting up an online wish petition campaign to coincide with the G8 Summit and Tanabata 92 Human rights violations and border controls Edit One day before the G8 Finance Ministers Meeting started in Osaka with a very large police presence a day labourer in Kamagasaki was allegedly tortured by the police In response many day labourers and other local citizens carried out several days of street protests citation needed During the month before the 34th G8 Summit started over 40 people were arrested in pre emptive sweeps of broad left and anarchist groups 12 Just preceding the summit Via Campesina complained about the detention for over 24 hours of 19 or 20 Korean farmers at New Chitose Airport and their likely deportation from Japan stating that the farmers were travelling with an official invitation letter from Nouminren Japanese Family Farmers Movement and a full programme of their planned activities as requested by the authorities Via Campesina asserted the right to meet demonstrate and propose solutions to the problems facing humanity and the environment and demanded that all the farmers workers and other activists detained at the Sapporo Airport be allowed to join the civil society activities parallel to the G8 Summit 13 14 During a non violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place or even appeared likely to take place according to Ko Watari a legal observer at least four people were arrested including a Reuters cameraman The arrestees potentially face years in prison according to the No G8 Legal Team 15 Citizen journalism Edit Citizens groups organized several citizen journalism centres to provide independent media coverage of the expected protests 93 In a sense this text is the work product of something like citizen journalism creating this article as part of the first rough draft of history 94 Accomplishments Edit G8 family photo at the Hokkaido summit From left are Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi of Italy President Dmitry Medvedev of Russia Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany Prime Minister Gordon Brown of the United Kingdom Prime Minister Yasuo Fukuda of Japan President George W Bush of the United States Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada President Nicolas Sarkozy of France and Jose Manuel Barroso President of the European Commission The composition of the G8 summit is not an agenda item but wanted to see the group expand to include China Mexico India Brazil and other major economies like Australia South Korea and Spain The G8 summit is an international event which is observed and reported by news media but the G8 s continuing relevance after more than 30 years is somewhat unclear 95 More than one analyst suggests that a G 8 summit is not the place to flesh out the details of any difficult or controversial policy issue in the context of a three day event 96 Rather the meeting offers an opportunity to bring a range of complex and sometimes inter related issues The G8 summit brings leaders together not so they can dream up quick fixes but to talk and think about them together 97 Analysts anticipate that this will not be a summit in which an ambitious new agenda is mapped out but rather one which will be cautiously focused on trying to keep the lid on growing global discontent 18 In 1976 the first year Canada attended the nations issued a 1 600 word statement that made seven commitments none of which were ever fully delivered by the members In 2007 the nations made 329 commitments about a third of which are being turned into reality This defenders of the G8 say is proof of the summits continuing effectiveness the G8 are generally doing a better job than ever before of delivering on pledges made at these annual summit meetings 3 The projected evaluation of this G8 summit can be assessed or measured in a context which encompasses the most recent G8 summits At the 2004 summit at Sea Island in United States the G8 leaders agreed to extend debt relief programs for poor countries but fell short of demands for a total write off of loans owed by African nations to multilateral lending agencies The G8 leaders said they would extend the term of the Highly Indebted Poor Countries initiative under which poor states can write off some of their debt A summary of accomplishments from the three most recent G8 summits would include 98 2005 summit In Gleneagles in Scotland the G8 leaders agreed to more than double aid to Africa by 2010 but aid agencies argued there was little new money in the pledge They also pledged that G8 nations and other donors would increase total aid for all developing countries by about 50 billion a year by 2010 Assistance to Africa was put at the top of the 2005 summit by British Prime Minister Tony Blair 99 but those well intentioned plans were thwarted because Blair was forced to return to London after terrorist bomb explosions disrupted London s public transportation The discussion about African issues was not as fruitful as the regular G8 sessions and had a fragmented character A credible analysis of the summit suggests that Gleneagles stands apart from the other G8 summits It would have been a regular summit if not for the terrorist attacks on London as odd as it may seem at first sight Although the tragedy took away a considerable portion of attention that would have otherwise been directed to the world richest and most powerful countries the attacks provided for the relative success of the summit due to the necessity to demonstrate the united front against terrorism and to achieve somewhat tangible results that terrorists could not prevent 100 2006 summit In Saint Petersburg in Russia the G8 leaders agreed to a formal agenda of energy security combating infectious diseases and promoting education all topics held little controversy and required no financial commitment by G8 members Assistance to Africa from the 2005 summit agenda re appeared on the 2006 agenda 99 but no tangible actions ensued 98 2007 summit In Heiligendamm in Germany the G8 leaders agreed to consider a global goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions and to negotiate a new global climate pact that would extend and broaden the Kyoto Protocols 101 For Africa the G8 pledged 60 billion to fight AIDS malaria and tuberculosis 99 but the declaration set out no specific timetable nor did it break down individual countries contributions or spell out how much of the total funds had been previously promised 98 Infrastructure Consortium for Africa Edit The Infrastructure Consortium for Africa ICA was established at the 31st G8 summit at Gleneagles Scotland in the United Kingdom in 2005 Since that time the ICA s annual meeting is traditionally hosted by the country holding the Presidency of the G8 The 2008 meeting was held in Tokyo in March 2008 102 Budget Edit Main venue Windsor Hotel Toya Resort amp Spa Japan spent an unprecedented amount on hosting the G 8 Summit 103 Although a full accounting has not been announced the estimated total budget was more than 60 billion 30 billion 283 million 561 million used by the National Police Agency for patrolling the venues including taking counter terrorism measures 104 When the three day meeting ends Japanese taxpayers will face a bill which dwarfs the estimated 1 3m Britain stumped up at Gleneagles three years ago A foreign ministry spokesman suggested that the number of parties attending this year is unprecedented which has admittedly complicated the arrangements and it s simply not fair to compare it with previous summits 105 25 5 billion will be spent by the Foreign Ministry 103 approximately 9 billion for communications infrastructure between the summit venue in Toyako and Rusutsu where the international media center will be located approximately 5 billion for the media center which is constructed on a parking lot in a ski resort and will accommodate around 3 000 people from the press and governments Inside and outside the center cutting edge environmental technology including fuel cells and heat pumps will be exhibited The center itself boasts eco friendly features including solar panels green walls and a snow cooling system Once the summit is over however the building will be demolished 1 billion each for The Defense Ministry and Japan Coast Guard for transporting the leaders and patrolling sea areas near the venue and monitoring the 46 km no fly zone surrounding the summit site 104 The Times reports that the estimated cost of the Hokkaidō summit topped 285 million 106 Notable statistics EditDelegates Edit Security Security Police undertaking VIP duties in Hokkaido Security Police in a Mercedes Benz S600 A placard in the window shows these SP officers are escorting the South Korea delegation With more than 2 000 delegates in total it is the largest G8 summit ever Besides the leaders of the G8 nations attending there are the government leaders of seven African nations and representatives from the five developing countries Also in attendance are leaders from Australia Indonesia and South Korea 107 Logistics Edit Media There are approximately 4 000 journalists covering the summit from a specially built 2 8 billion 25 92 million media center One hundred antennas were put up for mobile phones 107 Site The world leaders are staying at Windsor Hotel Toya Resort located on the peak of the 625 m tall Mount Poromoi overlooking Lake Tōya 107 Security There are more than 20 000 police providing ground based security 107 Military security includes 4 fighter jets AWACS reconnaissance 12 warships and Patriot surface to air missiles citation needed Human rights Over 40 dissidents were arrested before the summit started 12 At least 4 people were arrested including a Reuters cameraman during what a legal observer claimed was a non violent demonstration where no acts against property or people took place 15 Freedom of speech Nineteen or twenty Koreans critical of the G8 leadership and expected to participate in citizens debates were detained by the Japanese authorities at New Chitose Airport for at least 24 hours and were expected to be deported 13 14 Cost The total cost of the three day summit has been estimated at 60 billion 107 Food Fifty chefs from 23 local hotels are creating special meals using 105 different local products 107 and the first night banquet featured 19 dishes 70 Expressed differently the summit leaders enjoyed a six course lunch followed by an eight course dinner 107 NGOs More than 140 non government organizations are holding an alternative summit in the prefectural capital of Sapporo 107 Business opportunity EditFor some the G8 summit became a profit generating event as for example the G8 Summit magazine which has been published under the auspices of the host nations for distribution to all attendees since 1998 108 Hokkaido s small businesses which were located near the summit site discovered that most of their customers were policemen during the event and the tourist trade was virtually dead The Guardian reported one shop owner s terse point of view I just want to get this summit over and done with so we can get back to normal 105 In contrast a foreign ministry spokesman focused on the exposure Toyako Lake Toya received in the international media and he argued that the short term sacrifice would prove to be worthwhile in terms of long term business opportunities 105 Gallery EditCore G8 participants Edit CanadaStephen Harper Prime Minister 25 FranceNicolas Sarkozy President President of the Council of the European Union 25 GermanyAngela Merkel Chancellor 25 ItalySilvio Berlusconi Prime Minister 25 JapanYasuo Fukuda Prime Minister 25 RussiaDmitry Medvedev President 25 United KingdomGordon Brown Prime Minister 25 United StatesGeorge W Bush President 25 European UnionJose Manuel Barroso Commission President 25 See also Edit Energy portalCool Earth 50 Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change The Monster X Strikes Back Attack the G8 Summit a Japanese kaiju comedy film depicting a monster attack on the summitReferences Edit Japan Ministry of Foreign Affairs MOFA 34th G8 summit overview Zablonski Lukasz and Philip Seaton The Hokkaido Summit as a Springboard for Grassroots Initiatives The Peace Reconciliation amp Civil Society Symposium The 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the Wayback Machine G8 Media Network Working Units G8 Media Network 2008 06 29 Archived from the original on 1 July 2008 Retrieved 2008 06 29 Ralph Keyes 2006 05 30 The quote verifier who said what where and when Macmillan p 107 ISBN 978 0 312 34004 9 Lee Don On eve of summit G 8 s relevance is unclear Los Angeles Times July 6 2008 Archived August 3 2008 at the Wayback Machine Wang Jingzhong and Tian Fan News Analysis G8 summit to wrestle with 3F crisis Xinhua Beijing July 7 2008 3F crisis Financial turmoil Fuel and Food price hikes Feldman Adam What s Wrong With The G 8 Forbes New York July 7 2008 Archived October 25 2008 at the Wayback Machine a b c Reuters Factbox What happened at the last five G8 summits July 2 2008 a b c Japan MOFA Africa on agenda at Gleneagles Saint Petersburg Heiligendamm June 30 2008 Archived December 19 2008 at the Wayback Machine Panova Victoria Impressions of the 2005 Gleneagles Summit G8 Information Centre 2005 Gleneagles Summit Analytical Studies July 18 2005 Japan MOFA Climate change on agenda at Heiligendamm June 30 2008 Archived December 19 2008 at the Wayback Machine Meeting to Discuss Crisis Impact in Africa s Infrastructure Development Afrol News March 2 2009 a b Fukada Takahiro G8 Countdown 60 billion G8 budget draws flak Japan Times Online Tokyo July 1 2008 a b Ryall Julian G8 summit to be guarded by 40 000 police The Independent London July 4 2008 a b c McCurry Justin G8 summit Breathtaking venue with no protesters to spoil the view Guardian Manchester July 5 2008 Coates Sam Emily Gosden and Sean O Neill Recession summit to cost Britain 50m The Times London March 11 2009 a b c d e f g h The G8 summit in numbers The Earth Times San Diego July 7 2008 Archived March 3 2016 at the Wayback Machine Prestige Media Archived May 19 2009 at the Wayback Machine official G8 Summit magazine Archived May 18 2009 at the Wayback MachineFurther reading EditNicholas Bayne Robert D Putnam 2000 Hanging in there the G7 and G8 summit in maturity and renewal Ashgate Pub Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 1185 1 Nicholas Bayne 2005 Staying together the G8 summit confronts the 21st century Ashgate Pub Ltd ISBN 978 0 7546 4267 1 Peter I Hajnal 2007 The G8 system and the G20 evolution role and documentation Ashgate Pub Co ISBN 978 0 7546 4550 4 Glenn D Hook 2005 09 28 Japan s international relations politics economics and security RoutledgeCurzon ISBN 978 0 415 33637 6 Bob Reinalda 1998 Autonomous policy making by international organizations Psychology Press ISBN 978 0 415 16486 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to 34th G8 summit Official municipal website Toyako cho Summit Promotion University of Toronto G8 Research Group G8 Information Centre G8 2008 delegations amp documents Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 34th G8 summit amp oldid 1135400283, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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