Lawmakers Push for Reduced EU Role at Saudi G20

Business

Sixty-five European lawmakers have signed a letter calling for the EU to downgrade its attendance at next month’s G20 summit in Riyadh over human rights concerns, according to a document released Monday. The letter signed by European Parliament members follows a wide-ranging resolution passed earlier this month that also appealed for the downgrade to “avoid legitimising impunity for human rights violations” in Saudi Arabia, the current G20 president.
A downgrade would imply Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and the president of the European Council, Charles Michel, do not take part in the virtual summit if they heed the call of lawmakers. “We should not legitimise a government committing egregious human rights violations as host of one of the most important summit meetings in the world,” said the letter addressed to Michel and von der Leyen. “We ask you to re-evaluate your participation in this year’s G20 summit and consider not attending, but instead downgrading the level of the European Union participation to a senior official level,” added the letter seen by AFP. There was no immediate reaction from Saudi authorities.
It was unclear whether Michel and der Leyen will accept the written appeal. But the resolution and the letter, which coincides with the two-year anniversary of the brutal murder in Istanbul of journalist Jamal Khashoggi by Saudi agents, send what a lawmaker called the parliament’s “strongest political message yet” to the kingdom. As a full member of the G20, the EU is a major economic power at the table along with three of its member states — Germany, France and Italy.

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