BEIJING, June 4 -- The G8 Group is an unofficial
forum of the heads of the leading industrialized democracies (Russia, the U.S.,
Britain, France, Japan, Germany, Canada and Italy), where the European
Commission is also represented and fully participates. This forum was designed
to harmonize attitudes to acute international problems. The member states
account for 49% of global exports, 51% of industrial output, and 49% of assets
in the International Monetary Fund.
The history of the Group, which initially had
consisted of seven members, began in November 1975, when the first meeting of
the leaders of six countries met in Rambouillet at the initiative of President
of France Giscard d¡¯Estaing. Canada joined the Group a year later.
EU representatives have attended G7 meetings since
1977 (the European Union is always represented at G8 Summits by the President of
the European Commission and the President of the European Council). Russia was
admitted to the Group at the Denver summit in 1997.
G8 is not an international organization. It does not
rest on an international agreement and does not have formal admission criteria,
a charter or a permanent secretariat. Its decisions are formulated as the
political commitments of the member states.
But G8 has developed a stable procedure, with summits
held regularly by rote in the partner states and the host country acting as the
chairman of G8 for a calendar year. It organizes the summit and ministerial,
expert and working meetings, elaborates the schedule and coordinates the routine
work of the Group.
Discussions of the heads of state and government are
held behind closed doors, with G8 Sherpas (personal representatives of leaders)
being the only outsiders. Decisions are adopted on the principle of consensus.
The annual working cycle of the Group is focused on
the preparations for and the holding of summits, the key event at the "club."
The Sherpas, who usually meet quarterly, lead and coordinate preparations.
The Sherpas lead the national teams that consist of
political directors, foreign affairs and financial Sous-Sherpas, and other
national experts. The Russian Sherpa is Igor Shuvalov, an aide to the Russian
President.
Regular meetings of foreign and finance ministers
play a major part in the preparation of summits, which entail also (by
agreement) the meetings of environment, energy, labor and social development,
healthcare, science and education, interior and justice ministers (prosecutors
general).
G8 also has working and expert groups and task
forces. As of now, there are the High Level Group on Nonproliferation, the
Rome/Lyons Group (on terrorism and organized crime), the Counter-Terrorism
Expert Group, the G8 Personal Representatives for Africa, the Global Partnership
Senior Officials Group, the G8 Nonproliferation Experts Group (with a plutonium
subgroup), the Nuclear Safety and Security Group, and several others. G8 holds
an average of 60 to 80 functions annually.
In accordance with the decision of the G8 summit in
Kananaskis in 2002, Russia took the rotating chair of the group on January 1,
2006.
(Source: en.g8russia.ru)¡¡