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*{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} '''[[United Kingdom]]'''
*{{flagicon|United Kingdom}} '''[[United Kingdom]]'''
*{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[United States]]'''
*{{flagicon|USA}} '''[[United States]]'''
+
*{{flagicon|EU}} '''[[European Union]]'''<ref name="ec1">{{cite web| url = http://www.deljpn.ec.europa.eu/union/showpage_en_union.external.g8.php| title = EU and the G8| accessdate = 2007-09-25| publisher = European Commission}}</ref>


===Invited (partial participation)===
===Invited (partial participation)===
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* {{flagicon|Jordan}} '''[[Jordan]]'''<ref name="oliver1">[see above]</ref>
* {{flagicon|Jordan}} '''[[Jordan]]'''<ref name="oliver1">[see above]</ref>
* {{flagicon|Yemen}} '''[[Yemen]]'''<ref name="oliver1">[see above]</ref>
* {{flagicon|Yemen}} '''[[Yemen]]'''<ref name="oliver1">[see above]</ref>

;Heads of international organizations
Leaders of the major international organizations were invited to attend the summit.
* {{flagicon|UN}} '''[[United Nations]]''' [[Kofi Annan]], Secretary-General
*{{flagicon|EU}} '''[[European Union]]'''<ref name="ec1">{{cite web| url = http://www.deljpn.ec.europa.eu/union/showpage_en_union.external.g8.php| title = EU and the G8| accessdate = 2007-09-25| publisher = European Commission}}</ref>


==Priorities==
==Priorities==

Revision as of 16:40, 20 July 2008

30th G8 Summit
File:G8 sea island.gif
30th G8 Summit official logo
Host countryUnited States
DatesJune 8June 10

The 30th G8 summit took place in Sea Island, Georgia, United States, on June 8- June 10 2004.

Composition of summit leaders

The core membership of the G8 has remained constant since Russia joined the talks at the 1997 summit in Denver.

Permanent

Invited (partial participation)

Other non-G8 leaders were invited to attend and participate in the summit talks, including the heads of Afghanistan, Algeria, Bahrain, Jordan and Yemen.[1]

Heads of international organizations

Leaders of the major international organizations were invited to attend the summit.

Priorities

Traditionally, the host country of the G8 summit sets the agenda for negotiations, which take place primarily amongst multi-national civil servants in the weeks before the summit itself, leading to a joint declaration which all countries can agree to sign.

Citizens' responses and authorities' counter-responses

Protests

The protests against the 2004 meeting of the G8 Summit in Sea Island, Georgia, took place over the course of several days in the cities of Brunswick and Savannah, Ga.

The protests began with an anti-war march in Brunswick on June 8 and an anti-G8 march in Savannah. A vigil on the night of June 9 attracted 300 people and the Fair World Fair was launched. Tensions between police and protestors grew during an environmental march the following day, during which a group of demonstrators faced down riot police outside of a chemical plant.

The last and most eventful action, the March for a Free Palestine, took place in Brunswick. Several activists made a replica of part of the wall being built between Israel and Palestine, and burnt it to the ground. A breakaway march took over the causeway leading to the G8 meeting and ended in a sit-in in front of a security fence. The police arrested some fifteen people.

The protests were considerably smaller than other American protests over the past few years, including the 2003 Anti-War movement and the Summit of the Americas in Miami seven months earlier. While those events drew thousands of people and sometimes as many as 100,000, the convergence in Georgia drew about 500-700.

Security

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) designated the summit a National Special Security Event (NSSE), because of the protests and so many heads of state of government attending. However, DHS started to handle another NSSE at the same time: the state funeral of former president Ronald Reagan. Some of the world leaders who attended the summit decided to extend their stay in the U.S. to attend the funeral in Washington. One of them was German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Oliver Mark. "G8 leaders meet on remote island," Guardian (Manchester). June 8, 2004. Cite error: The named reference "oliver1" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
  2. ^ "EU and the G8". European Commission. Retrieved 2007-09-25.

See also

External links

Media related to 30th G8 summit at Wikimedia Commons

Preceded by 30th G8 summit
2004
United States
Succeeded by