As host of this year's G20 summit in Osaka, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's spouse Akie Abe warmly welcomed the first spouses of world leader's as part of the G20 partners' program.
After greeting her guests with a traditional Japanese tea ceremony in the Zen Garden, Abe invited the partners to feed the fish in the pond and mingle. The intimate event was followed by a visit to Kyoto's famous Tofuku-ji Temple, complete with a welcome by a Buddhist monk and a tsuzumi (hand-drum) performance.
The wives and partners of world leaders then congregated for a photo opp at the steps of the temple. Included in the mix as the only 'first gentleman' was departing U.K. Prime Minister Theresa May's husband Philip May. The family photo brought to mind the NATO summit of 2017 in Brussels, where the husband of Luxembourg's first openly gay Prime Minister Bettel, Gautheir Destenay, appeared as the first male ever in a NATO spouse photo among a sea of first ladies.
Joining May and host Abe was Singaporean First Lady Ho Ching, South Korean First Lady Kim Jung-sook, South African First Lady Tshepo Motsepe, French First Lady Brigitte Macron, Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison's wife Jenny, Indonesian First Lady Iriana Joko Widodo, European Council President Donald Tusk's wife Malgorzata, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's wife Sophie, Argentinian First Lady Juliana Awada, Spanish First Lady María Begoña Gómez Fernández and Turkey's First Lady Emine Erdoğan.
U.S. First Lady Melania Trump, however, was noticeably absent from the cheery photo.
Erdoğan shared photos of their day and welcoming ceremony on her official Twitter acount. Attached as a caption to the four photos she said: "We met with the spouses of the heads of state at Kyototarget="_blank"'>