Anti-capitalism rampage erupts in France as G7 summit opens

Anti-capitalism rampage erupts in France as G7 summit opens

French riot police used water cannons and tear gas on Saturday to disperse anti-capitalism protesters in Bayonne, near Biarritz, as G7 summit launched on Saturday in France.

A police helicopter circled as protesters taunted lines of police.

The leaders themselves were gathering behind tight security in a waterfront conference venue, the surrounding streets barricaded by police.

G7 nations leaders gathered for an annual summit, exposing sharp differences on global trade tensions, Britain’s exit from the EU and how to respond to the fires raging in the Amazon rainforest.

French president Emmanuel Macron, the summit host, planned the three-day meeting in the Atlantic seaside resort of Biarritz as a chance to unite a group of wealthy countries that has struggled in recent years to speak with one voice.

Macron set an agenda for the group - France, Britain, Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan and the United States - that included the defence of democracy, gender equality, education and the environment.

He invited Asian, African and Latin American leaders to join them for a global push on these issues.

However, in a bleak assessment of relations between once-close allies, European Council president Donald Tusk said it was getting ‘increasingly’ hard to find common ground.

‘This is another G7 summit which will be a difficult test of unity and solidarity of the free world and its leaders,’ he told reporters ahead of the meeting. ‘This may be the last moment to restore our political community.’

US president Donald Trump had brought last year’s G7 summit to an acrimonious end, walking out early from the gathering in Canada and rejecting the final communique.

Trump arrived in France a day after responding to a new round of Chinese tariffs by announcing that Washington would impose an additional 5% duty on some $550 billion worth of Chinese imports, the latest escalation of the tit-for-tat trade war by the world’s two largest economies.

‘So far so good,’ Trump told reporters as he sat on a seafront terrace with Macron, saying the two leaders had a special relationship. ‘We’ll accomplish a lot this weekend.’

Macron listed foreign policy issues the two would address, including Libya, Syria and North Korea, and said they shared the objective of preventing Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

Trump later wrote on Twitter that lunch with Macron was the best meeting the pair has yet had, and that a meeting with world leaders on Saturday evening also ‘went very well.’

However, the initial smiles could not disguise the opposing approaches of Trump and Macron to many problems, including the knotty questions of protectionism and tax.

Before his arrival, Trump repeated a threat to tax French wines in retaliation for a new French levy on digital services, which he says, ‘unfairly targets US companies’.

Two US officials said the Trump delegation was also irked that Macron had skewed the focus of the G7 meeting to ‘niche issues’ at the expense of the global economy, which many leaders worry is slowing sharply and at risk of slipping into recession.-Reuters