BANGKOK: Leaders gathering for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) forum in Thailand should “rise above differences,” the host said on Thursday, after a series of summits in the region were dominated by geopolitical tension over the war in Ukraine.
Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai said the meeting of the 21-member bloc, which starts Friday, “takes place at a pivotal juncture” with the world facing multiple risks.
“Cancel mentality... permeates every conversation and action, (and) makes any compromise appear impossible,” he said in a statement after a meeting of the bloc’s foreign ministers ahead of the main summit.
“That’s why APEC this year must rise above these challenges and deliver hope to the world at large.”
Thai Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha at a pre-summit business event said the focus of meetings would be “new trade and investment narratives... the need to reconnect supply chains and travel, and the global sustainability agenda.”
On the APEC sidelines, Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to have talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida later in the day. Xi had been due to give an address to a business forum but canceled, organizers said.
US Vice President Kamala Harris and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese are among those also attending the main meeting, while French President Emmanuel Macron is a special guest.
The APEC meeting comes on the heels of the Group of 20 (G20) summit in Bali where countries unanimously adopted a declaration saying most members condemned the war in Ukraine, but that also acknowledged some countries saw the conflict differently.
Host Indonesia said the Ukraine war had been the most contentious issue.
The war also figured prominently at the East Asia Summit and the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) Summits in Cambodia at the weekend, as did the crisis in Myanmar, whose ruling generals were barred from attending due to failure to follow a peace process.
On Thursday, as leaders prepared for the APEC meeting, the junta in neighboring Myanmar announced it would free 5,774 political prisoners, among them a Japanese filmmaker, a former British ambassador and an Australian economist and former adviser to deposed leader Aung San Suu Kyi,
Activists and the military’s opponents welcomed the amnesty, but warned the world not to be tricked by the junta, which they said was using people as bargaining chips.
Tensions also simmered elsewhere at the G20 summit in Bali when Xi criticized Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in person over alleged leaks of their closed-door meeting, a rare public display of annoyance by the Chinese leader.
Russia is a member of both G20 and APEC but President Vladimir Putin has stayed away. First Deputy Prime Minister Andrey Belousov will stand in for him at APEC.
Geopolitics to stay in focus at APEC summit in Thailand
https://arab.news/p95sv
Geopolitics to stay in focus at APEC summit in Thailand
- Chinese President Xi Jinping is expected to have talks with Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida
- US Vice President Kamala Harris and Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese are among those attending
Le Pen: French far-right leader battling for political survival
- Le Pen has said prosecutors wanted her “political death,” adding that she was being put on trial as a “political target“
- Her life has been marked by the legacy of her outwardly racist father
PARIS: Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who needs to have a graft conviction overturned to seize her best chance at the French presidency, risks seeing her life’s work upended if she loses her appeal.
Le Pen took over leadership of the National Front (FN) in 2011 from her father Jean-Marie, who co-founded France’s main postwar far-right movement.
In a move to distance it from the legacy of her father, who openly made antisemitic and racist statements, she renamed the party the National Rally (RN) and embarked on a policy she dubbed “de-demonization.”
The work bore fruit. In snap legislative polls in summer 2023, the RN emerged as the largest single party in the National Assembly — although without the outright majority it had targeted.
That gave Le Pen’s party power over French politics it had never before enjoyed, which she used by backing a no-confidence vote that toppled the government of prime minister Michel Barnier later in the year.
Critics accuse the party of still being inherently racist, taking too long to distance itself from Russia after its invasion of Ukraine and resorting to corrupt tactics to ease its strained finances, allegations Le Pen denies.
But by playing on people’s day-to-day concerns about immigration and the cost of living, Le Pen was seen as having her best chance to become France’s president in 2027 after three unsuccessful attempts.
- ‘Political target’ -
But her conviction last year, involving the use of fake jobs at the European Union parliament to channel funds to her party to employ people in France, has posed a potentially insurmountable hurdle to her long-sought end goal.
She was banned with immediate effect from standing for office for five years, which effectively disqualified her from running in next year’s presidential election.
Le Pen, 57, has said prosecutors wanted her “political death,” adding that she was being put on trial as a “political target.”
With her own ambitions hanging in the balance, she has backed her young lieutenant and protege, 30-year-old Jordan Bardella, to run in her place if needed.
“Bardella can win instead of me,” she told La Tribune Dimanche in December.
A poll in November predicted that Bardella — who is the RN party chief and not among those accused in the trial against Le Pen — would win the second round of the 2027 elections, no matter who stands against him.
- ‘Immense pain’ -
After coming third in the 2012 presidential polls, Marine Le Pen made the run-off in 2017 and 2022 but was beaten by Emmanuel Macron on both occasions.
Yet 2027 could be different, with Macron not allowed to stand again under France’s constitution.
Le Pen’s life has been marked by the legacy of her outwardly racist father, a veteran of the long war in Algeria that ultimately led to the former French colony’s independence.
She expelled her father, who once called the gas chambers of the Holocaust a “detail of history,” from the party in 2011, helping to temper its toxic image.
But his death last year aged 96 plunged his daughter into grief.
“I will never forgive myself” for expelling him, she said, describing him as a “warrior” in a tribute.
“I know it caused him immense pain,” she said of the man opponents nicknamed “the devil of the republic.”
“This decision was one of the most difficult of my life. And until the end of my life, I will always ask myself the question: ‘Could I have done this differently?’,” she said.










