Context:
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Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Johannesburg, South Africa, to attend the 20th G20 Leaders’ Summit, marking a historic moment as the first G20 Summit held on the African continent.
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India aims to advance its civilisational and development-centric vision of ‘Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam – One Earth, One Family, One Future’, reinforcing inclusive global governance.
Key Highlights:
India’s Vision & Diplomatic Messaging
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PM Modi will present India’s ‘One Future’ vision, rooted in:
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Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam
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Collective responsibility for global development, sustainability, and equity
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Aligns with the G20 theme: ‘Solidarity, Equality and Sustainability’.
Africa-Centric Milestones
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First-ever G20 Summit in Africa, symbolising the Global South’s rising voice.
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African Union became a permanent G20 member during India’s G20 Presidency in 2023, a landmark reform in multilateralism.
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South Africa assumed G20 Presidency in December 2024, prioritising Africa-focused development challenges.
Summit Agenda & Priority Areas
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Strengthening disaster resilience
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Addressing debt sustainability of low-income and developing countries
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Mobilising finance for a just energy transition
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Leveraging critical minerals for inclusive and sustainable growth
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Reviewing outcomes of the first G20 work cycle
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Addressing the high cost of capital faced by developing economies
Bilateral & Multilateral Engagements
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PM Modi expected to hold bilateral meetings, including with Japan’s new PM Sanae Takaichi.
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Participation in the 6th IBSA (India–Brazil–South Africa) Summit, strengthening South–South cooperation among major democracies of the Global South.
Relevant Prelims Points:
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Issue: Reforming global governance to reflect contemporary realities.
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Key Forums:
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G20: Platform of major developed and developing economies
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IBSA: Trilateral cooperation forum among India, Brazil, and South Africa
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Key Concepts:
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Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam: “The world is one family”
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African Union: Permanent G20 member since 2023
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Impact:
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Enhanced representation of Africa and Global South in global decision-making
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Relevant Mains Points:
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International Relations Dimension:
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India positions itself as a bridge between the Global North and Global South.
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Africa’s inclusion strengthens the legitimacy and representativeness of the G20.
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Governance & Multilateral Reform:
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Permanent inclusion of AU reflects democratisation of global institutions.
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Focus on debt relief and cost of capital addresses structural inequities in global finance.
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Economic Perspective:
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Critical minerals cooperation supports energy transition and industrial growth.
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Emphasis on just transition aligns climate action with development needs.
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Strategic & Diplomatic Significance:
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IBSA reinforces South–South cooperation outside traditional power blocs.
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India’s civilisational ethos strengthens its soft power diplomacy.
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Way Forward:
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Translate summit declarations into actionable financing mechanisms
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Deepen India–Africa economic and technological partnerships
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Sustain Global South consensus on reforming multilateral institutions
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UPSC Relevance (GS-wise):
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GS 2: International Relations, Multilateral Institutions, Global Governance
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GS 2: Polity – India’s foreign policy principles
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Prelims: G20, African Union, IBSA, Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam
