[Published: Monday November 17 2025]
 G20 summit this Saturday and Sunday in South Africa
JOHANNESBURG, 17 Nov. - (ANA) - South Africa will host the annual G20 summit on Saturday and Sunday (22 and 23 November), which the US has pledged to boycott, accusing the government of "persecution" and "human rights abuses" against the white minority (Afrikaners) in South Africa.
South Africa's president Cyril Ramaphosa has rejected the claims, saying that "boycott politics doesn't work" and that the US' "absence is their [own] loss”.
Ahead of the G20 meeting, von der Leyen and European Council president António Costa will meet Ramaphosa for an EU-South Africa summit.
The dramatic withdrawal of the US and the no-show from China’s Xi Jinping has taken some of the shine off what was expected to be a triumphant week of global leadership for President Cyril Ramaphosa, and Africa in general.
South Africa’s G20 leadership has raised the profile of key challenges facing the continent: In particular, rethinking how to ensure debt sustainability for low-income countries, and how to mobilize finance for a just energy transition.
It is clear Africa’s future is being squeezed by a mix of debt, climate pressure, and shrinking development finance options. Most Africans now live in countries that spend more on interest payments than on their health or education budgets, even as climate shocks are hitting harder and more often, battering crops, deepening hunger, and eroding human wellbeing.
Ahead of the G20 this weekend, Johannesburg is this week hosting the B20, where financial inclusion is emerging as one of the top talking points for corporate leaders, not only to drive economic engagement by all citizens but to ultimately build robust saving systems from which local funds can back infrastructure investment.
Digital infrastructure will of course be key for driving financial inclusion. - (ANA) -
AB/ANA/17 November 2025 - - - |