
German Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva met on the sidelines of G20 talks in South Africa on Saturday, after the German leader sparked outrage with comments on the Brazilian city hosting the COP30 climate talks.
Sources close to the chancellor described Saturday's meeting, which focused on the UN Climate Change Conference in Brazil, tropical rainforest protection and the war in Ukraine, as "very harmonious," though it was unclear whether Merz’s controversial comments were discussed.
Merz had travelled to the Amazon city of Belém for a summit two weeks ago ahead of the annual climate conference. On his return to Berlin, the chancellor said he had asked journalists who accompanied him whether any of them wanted to stay.
"No one raised their hand," Merz said. He argued that the reporters were "happy" to return to Germany, which he described as "one of the most beautiful countries in the world."
The statement triggered anger in Brazil, including from President Lula.
At the time, Lula said Merz should have gone to a bar in Belém, danced and tried out the local cuisine.
LATEST POSTS
- 1
A Manual for Pick Viable Psychological well-being Backing Administrations In 2024 - 2
Geomagnetic storm grounds launch of Mars space weather satellites - 3
Instructions to Expand Your Smash 1500's Presentation: Tips and Deceives - 4
The most effective method to Pick the Ideal Lab Precious stone Wedding band - 5
Sought-After Extravagance Ocean side Objections for a Lovely Escape
Building a Maintainable Closet: Individual Excursions in Moral Style
Which camera do you believe is great for first-time clients? !
Before trips to Mars, we need better protection from cosmic rays
4 Family SUVs: Joining Solace and Style
A Past filled with Old Civilizations: The World's Most established Societies
At least 18 Palestinians killed in latest clashes in Gaza
The race is on to turn your body into a GLP-1 factory
Baby takes 1st steps after receiving groundbreaking gene-edited therapy
Addiction-stricken community struggles to keep a syringe program going after Trump's order













