G-20 Summit / This is a better platform than the United Nations - Farooq Abdullah said about G20

Zoom News : Sep 09, 2023, 08:21 AM
G-20 Summit: National Conference President Farooq Abdullah said on Friday that the platform of the G20 group is better than the United Nations, as 20 countries discuss their issues and find solutions. Abdullah said that although the G20 meets on a rotational basis in each member country, it is a normal process. Abdullah told reporters in Srinagar on the sidelines of a program of the National Conference, “The G20 meeting is a normal process. It takes place in 20 countries one by one. It is a better platform where these 20 countries come together to discuss their issues and find solutions. This is a better forum than the United Nations.”

What did you say when G20 meetings were held in India?

At the same time, when Farooq Abdullah was asked the question that what does holding a meeting in India mean for the country? To this, Abdullah said that such meetings are held in each member country on a rotational basis. He said, “Did G20 not take place in other countries? Next year this group will meet in Brazil, then after that it will meet in any other country in the group. When asked if he had received an invitation to the dinner hosted by the President, Abdullah said, "No". '. The former Chief Minister of Jammu and Kashmir said, “Why should the President invite me? I don't understand why the President would invite me."

Abdullah also spoke on the dispute over India and India's name

Not only this, on another question asked about the ongoing dispute over the name Bharat-India, the former Jammu and Kashmir CM said that both the names are there in the Constitution and there is no difference between the two. He said, “If you see the Prime Minister’s plane, it also has both India and Bharat written on it. I don't see any difference between the two, if anyone does, he knows, I don't. These two are the same thing. It is the media which creates controversies." Asked about "one nation, one election", he said, "Let the government place it before the Parliament and then we will see what we have to do." "

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