Peace Summit communiqué: which countries signed
Following the second plenary session of the Global Peace Summit in Switzerland on June 16, a joint communiqué was signed by 80 participating countries and 4 international organizations
Radio Liberty reported the information.
In particular, among the countries that did not support the communiqué are Saudi Arabia, Thailand, India, Mexico, South Africa, Brazil, the United Arab Emirates, and the Vatican.
However, Turkey, Hungary, Serbia, and Slovakia, contrary to average estimates, are ready to sign the document.
The day before, Austrian Chancellor Karl Nehammer said on the sidelines of the Summit that the final declaration of the conference in Switzerland would probably not be signed by all participants.
According to Deutsche Welle, citing the dpa news agency, the chancellor noted that the final declaration of the Summit is a matter of "diplomatic subtleties, such as individual words," and that this does not affect the overall basic position, he said.
"So I'm not too worried if not everyone signs now," Nehammer said.
He also emphasized that before Russia sits down at the negotiating table, another conference in a different format is possible.
"You really have to see this as a process," the Austrian chancellor emphasized.
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On Sunday, June 16, the Summit participants gathered for the second plenary session. The final declaration is to be approved and signed today.
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