Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida promised Sunday that his nation will do the whole lot attainable to make sure the security of the Group of Seven leaders and ministers assembly in Japan this month.
“We have to make every effort to ensure security and safety … [as] dignitaries from all over the world gather,” Kishida advised reporters Sunday.
His pledge got here a day after a suspect threw an obvious smoke bomb in western Japan as Kishida was delivering an deal with in help of a neighborhood politician.
The prime minister was not harm within the incident. A suspect has been arrested.
G-7 international ministers, together with U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken, started three days of talks Sunday within the central Japanese city of Karuizawa.