Meeting in Indonesia: Putin does not come to the G20 summit

Next week's G20 summit in Indonesia would be an opportunity for leaders to speak face-to-face with Russian President Putin.

Meeting in Indonesia: Putin does not come to the G20 summit

Next week's G20 summit in Indonesia would be an opportunity for leaders to speak face-to-face with Russian President Putin. But it will not come to that, as the summit organization announced.

According to the host country Indonesia, Russian President Vladimir Putin will not personally attend the G20 summit on the island of Bali. Instead, Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov will travel to the meeting of the 20 major industrialized nations next week. This was announced by a spokesman for the Indonesian Ministry of Investments, which is responsible for coordinating the summit. Putin had long left open whether he would attend the November 15-16 meeting. There was initially no new statement from the Kremlin. Among others, US President Joe Biden and Federal Chancellor Olaf Scholz will travel to the summit.

The Russian war of aggression against Ukraine will be a central topic in the talks in Bali. For many, the announcement of Putin's rejection came as no surprise. The Kremlin chief had ordered the invasion of the neighboring country on February 24. Despite international protests, he has annexed four areas of Ukraine in violation of international law. No country recognizes the annexation of the territories by Russia.

The Southeast Asian island state of Indonesia holds the G20 presidency this year. As the host of the summit, President Joko Widodo had expressly invited the Russian head of state and said that he was expecting him in Bali. Widodo had also announced a peace initiative for Ukraine. At the summit, Indonesia will invite everyone "to sit down and engage in a constructive dialogue," he said at the end of October.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy has also been invited to the summit, although his country is not a member of the G20. A few days ago he had confirmed his participation, probably via video. Earlier, Zelenskyy said he would not travel to the meeting if Putin attended. Zelenskyy denounces Russia as a "terrorist state" and calls for the "aggressor's" exclusion from the G20 group - in which Moscow is not completely isolated given supporters such as China, India and Turkey.

President Widodo recently announced that 17 heads of state and government had agreed to attend the important meeting. "In normal times there are generally 17 or 18 heads of state or government present. But these are not normal times. So the presence of the same number is a very good thing."

Foreign Minister Lavrov, Putin's announced representative at the summit, caused an uproar at a meeting of G20 foreign ministers in Bali in July. He left the hall immediately after his speech and did not even listen to the comments of his critics. He then accused the West of preventing a peaceful solution to the conflict in Ukraine.

At the forthcoming summit, the Russian delegation will meet for the first time on an international stage with the heads of state and government of the G7, who have issued far-reaching sanctions against Russia because of the war against Ukraine.

Nevertheless, it cannot be ruled out that Putin will travel to Asia in the coming week: Immediately after the G20 meeting in Bali, the political focus will be on Thailand's capital Bangkok, where the summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Community (Apec ) takes place. Russia also belongs to this group, as does the USA. US President Joe Biden has already announced that he will send Vice President Kamala Harris as a representative to the APEC meeting.