WHISTLER, British Columbia - Finance leaders of the closest US?allies vented anger over the Trump administration's metal import tariffs but ended a three-day meeting in Canada on Saturday with no solutions, setting the stage for a heated fight at a G7 summit next week in Quebec.US?Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin failed to soothe the frustrations of his Group of Seven counterparts over the 25 percent steel and 10 percent aluminum tariffs that Washington imposed on Mexico, Canada and the European Union this week.Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors requested that the United States Secretary of the Treasury communicate their unanimous concern and disappointment, the group said in a summary statement written by Canada.Ministers and Governors agreed that this discussion should continue at the Leaders' Summit in Charlevoix (Quebec), where decisive action is needed, the statement said.The topic dominated discussions at the finance meeting in the Canadian mountain resort of Whistler, British Columbia.French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire said the United States has only a few days to avoid sparking a trade war with its allies and it is up to the United States to make a move to de-escalate tensions over tariffs.Speaking after the meeting, Le Maire said the EU was poised to take counter-measures against the new US?tariffs.The meeting of top economic policymakers was seen as a prelude to the trade disputes that will dominate the two-day G7 summit that begins on Friday in Quebec.Mnuchin is regarded as one of the more moderate voices on trade in the Trump administration,The US?steel and aluminum tariffs were imposed early on Friday after Canada, Mexico and the EU refused to accept quotas in negotiations with US?Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross. Japanese metal producers have been paying the tariffs since March 23.Reuters? custom awareness wristbands
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Photo taken on Oct 21, 2018 shows the rescuing site of the train derailment accident in Yilan County, Southeast China's Taiwan. [Photo/Xinhua] TAIPEI - A passenger train derailed in Yilan County, Taiwan Sunday afternoon, killing at least 22 people and injuring 171, according to the island's railway authority. According to the Central News Agency of Taiwan, the train had a total of eight cars, of which five cars are overturned. The train can carry 310 passengers but there have been more than 366 people on board as it is Sunday. The Puyuma Express No 6432 bound for Taitung from Shulin derailed at 4:50 pm Sunday local time in Yilan County, with several carriages overturned on a railway popular among tourists. Some passengers were reportedly hurt during the accident.
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