Indonesian president: Putin and Xi plan to attend November G20 summit

Bali,Aug 19, (dpa/GNA) – Russia’s Vladimir Putin and China’s Xi Jinping, are both expected to attend the G20 summit in Bali in November, according to Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo.

“Xi Jinping will come. President Putin has also told me he will come,” Widodo told Bloomberg in an interview published Friday.

Indonesia currently holds the G20 presidency. Widodo had invited Putin, but the Kremlin has so far not confirmed the Russian leader’s plans either way.

Presidential advisor Siti Ruhaini confirmed, that Widodo had been told Putin and Xi would come.

“That’s what the president said,” she noted.

“As the holder of the G20 presidency, Indonesia naturally wants the summit to be a forum where everyone gets together in a friendly atmosphere,” Ruhaini added.

Widodo has tried to mediate between Russia and Ukraine, visiting the two countries in late June on a trip that he described as a peace mission.

He has warned that a global food crisis caused by the Russian invasion of Ukraine, will send people in developing and poor countries into “the abyss of extreme poverty and hunger.”

There was no immediate confirmation of Putin and Xi’s attendance plans from Russian or Chinese sources.

Putin’s participation in the summit is considered problematic in the West, amid Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and several countries have put in doubt whether they would participate, if Putin attended in person. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, has also been invited.

China is also experiencing heightened tensions with the US, that were exacerbated by US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s recent visit to Taiwan, which was followed by a US congressional delegation visiting Taipei.

Beijing called the moves provocations, and launched large-scale military manoeuvres around the democratic island republic in response.

Indonesia is seeking trade and investment, and is not seeking to join any bloc, Widodo told Bloomberg. “Indonesia wants to be friends with everyone,” he said. “We don’t have problems with any country.”
GNA