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A G7 meeting in the Netherlands in 2014, to discuss the Russian invasion of Crimea. Seven years later, Russia is still in Crimea, and only Merkel remains of those leaders (Photo: Wikimedia)

Time to dump the G7 - it's a relic of the past

Dormant during the Covid-19 lockdown, the Group of Seven (G7) is determined to get back in the driver's seat of global governance.

G7 foreign and development ministers are meeting in-person in post-lockdown London on Monday (3 May) - their first face-to-face encounter in two years.

A mid-June G7 summit is also on the cards, with US president Joe Biden set to travel to Cornwall, and then to Brussels, to finally shake hands with America's best friends.

It is good to see leader...

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The views expressed in this opinion piece are the author’s, not those of EUobserver

Author Bio

Shada Islam is an EUobserver columnist, and independent EU analyst and commentator who runs her own strategy and advisory company New Horizons Project. She also teaches Europe-Asia relations as visiting professor at the College of Europe.

A G7 meeting in the Netherlands in 2014, to discuss the Russian invasion of Crimea. Seven years later, Russia is still in Crimea, and only Merkel remains of those leaders (Photo: Wikimedia)

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Author Bio

Shada Islam is an EUobserver columnist, and independent EU analyst and commentator who runs her own strategy and advisory company New Horizons Project. She also teaches Europe-Asia relations as visiting professor at the College of Europe.

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