-
Carpenter strikes for Chelsea but Barca hold on for draw in Women's Champions League
-
Rams-Bucs and Steelers-Bears match NFL division leaders
-
ExxonMobil relaunches natural gas project in Mozambique
-
Colombia's Petro in hot water as records reveal Lisbon strip club visit
-
Stocks lose steam on AI concerns as jobs data cloud rate cut hopes
-
Messi's Inter to open Miami stadium in April against Austin
-
US health agency edits website to reflect anti-vax views
-
US denies ending South Africa G20 boycott
-
Iniesta's company rebranding Israel Premier Tech cycling team
-
US plan 'good' for Russia, Ukraine: White House
-
Piastri ready to forget struggles and enjoy Vegas GP
-
US peace plan 'good' for Russia, Ukraine: White House
-
Researchers stunned by wolf's use of crab traps to feed
-
Colombia shows first treasures recovered from 300-year-old shipwreck
-
England's Daly ready for aerial challenge against Argentina
-
Covid inquiry finds UK inaction cost thousands of lives
-
Italy probes Tod's executives over labour exploitation
-
Trump floats death penalty for 'seditious' Democrats
-
Fire forces evacuation at UN climate talks
-
South Africa says US asks to join G20 summit, ending boycott
-
Montpellier deny 'racism' allegations in Fowler's book
-
UK Covid inquiry says thousands of lives could have been saved
-
UK Covid inuiry says thousands of lives could have been saved
-
Erasmus wants to 'fix' his Lansdowne Road jinx
-
US breaks its boycott of South Africa's G20 summit
-
Stocks climb tracking US jobs, Nvidia
-
Ukraine 'ready' to work with US on plan to end war
-
Wales rugby to take inspiration from round-ball cousin, says skipper Lake
-
Germany says China promised 'reliable' rare earth supply
-
Spanish PM urges defence of democracy, 50 years after Franco death
-
Israel launches fresh strikes on Gaza as Qatar fears for truce
-
UN celebrates youth activists using tech for good
-
AI's blind spot: tools fail to detect their own fakes
-
US health agency edits official website to reflect anti-vax views
-
US unemployment up even as hiring beat expectations in delayed report
-
US honors conservative titan Cheney, with Trump off guest list
-
Nigerian court jails Biafran separatist leader Kanu for life for 'terrorism'
-
Spain fight back against Czech Republic to reach Davis Cup semis
-
UN chief calls for 'ambitious compromise' at climate talks
-
Comet sparks scientific fascination, online furor over 'alien' origins
-
German Christmas market opens year after deadly car attack
-
Stocks rise as Nvidia overshadows US jobs report
-
Irish veterans Ringrose and van der Flier return for South Africa Test
-
Vietnam flooding submerges homes, kills 41, after relentless rain
-
Nigeria convicts Biafran separatist leader Kanu for 'terrorism'
-
Varney misses Italy's Chile Test with rib fracture
-
'Exciting prospect' Gordon recalled by Australia coach Schmidt
-
US unemployment up even as hiring beats expectations in delayed report
-
Nigeria convicts Biafran separatist leader Nnamdi Kanu for 'terrorism'
-
UN nuclear watchdog demands Iran open up bombed nuclear sites
US denies ending South Africa G20 boycott
President Donald Trump's administration on Thursday vehemently denied South Africa's announcement that the United States was ending a boycott of this weekend's G20 summit in Johannesburg, saying no US official would take part in talks.
President Cyril Ramaphosa earlier Thursday described an 11th-hour about-turn by the Trump administration, which had relentlessly attacked South Africa over treatment of white minority farmers by the post-apartheid government.
The White House said the US ambassador would attend but only for a handover ceremony as the United States will next year host the summit of the club of global economic powers, at a golf club owned by Trump in Florida.
"The United States is not participating in official talks at the G20 in South Africa," White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told reporters.
"I saw the South African president running his mouth a little bit against the United States and the president of the United States earlier today, and that language is not appreciated by the president or his team," she said.
Ramaphosa earlier said that the United States had a "change of mind about participating in one shape, form or other, in the summit."
Ramaphosa said the supposed change of heart was "a positive sign".
"All countries are here, and the United States, the biggest economy in the world, needs to be here," he said.
Ramaphosa's remarks came despite the US embassy in Pretoria sending a notice that it would not attend.
In the weekend message, it said South Africa's G20 priorities "run counter to the US policy views and we cannot support consensus on any documents negotiated under your presidency."
The agenda included improving debt sustainability for low-income countries, financing a "just energy transition" and harnessing "critical minerals for inclusive growth and sustainable development".
- Trump pulls US from world gatherings -
The Group of 20 represents some 85 percent of the global economy, with its summits becoming major gatherings for world leaders since the economic crisis of 2008.
Trump had initially agreed to send Vice President JD Vance before ruling out any participation.
The G20 summit is the latest major international gathering to be snubbed by the United States under Trump.
The United States is also shunning the ongoing COP30 climate talks in Brazil, with Trump instead defending fossil fuels and rejecting the scientific consensus on the planet's rising temperatures.
Trump has singled out South Africa for harsh treatment since he returned to the White House in January, often seizing on far-right commentary on the internet.
Trump has repeated debunked claims that white Afrikaners are being systematically "killed and slaughtered" in the country, which has high levels of violence. The Trump administration also expelled South Africa's ambassador after he accused Trump of racism.
Trump has imposed 30 percent trade tariffs on South Africa, the highest in sub-Saharan Africa.
Despite Trump's boycott, US businesses are well represented at a separate Business 20 (B20) event that wound up in Johannesburg on Thursday.
The head of the US Chamber of Commerce, Suzanne Clark, thanked South Africa for fostering "real collaboration between G20 nations during a time of rapid change" during its presidency.
"The US Chamber of Commerce will use our B20 leadership to foster international collaboration," Clark said.
The United States has significant business interests in South Africa with more than 600 US companies operating there, according to the South African embassy in Washington.
bur-ho-ub-sct/iv
A.Rodriguezv--AMWN