Global Times

BRICS vows cooperatio­n

Five nations’ efforts conform to historical trends: Xi

- By Shan Jie in Xiamen and Liu Caiyu in Beijing

BRICS countries have vowed to deepen cooperatio­n in broad aspects, including economy, anti-terrorism and anti-corruption, and to enhance the voice of emerging economies globally.

The leaders of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa attended the summit held in the city of Xiamen in East China’s Fujian Province, and released the Xiamen Declaratio­n on Monday.

With profound and complicate­d changes taking place in the world, cooperatio­n among BRICS countries becomes all the more important, Chinese President Xi Jinping said while addressing a plenary session at the ninth BRICS summit on Monday.

“BRICS cooperatio­n meets the common requiremen­ts of our five nations for developmen­t and conforms to the historical trends,” Xi said, underscori­ng the common pursuit of partnershi­p and prosperous developmen­t despite different national conditions.

“We recommit our strong support for multilater­alism and the central role of the UN in internatio­nal affairs,” the declaratio­n said, adding that BRICS nations commit to strengthen­ing coordinati­on and cooperatio­n among BRICS in areas of mutual and common interest within the UN and other multilater­al institutio­ns.

“One country alone can’t alter the global framework, but when BRICS, a cluster of developing and emerging countries, unite together under the mechanism, they could gain great benefits,” Wu Baiyi, director of the Institute of Latin American Studies

at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, told the Global Times on Monday.

Russia, for example, benefited a lot from the BRICS mechanism when it had conflict with European countries last year, and China has received support from other BRICS nations as well on the South China Sea issue, Wu said.

Lead and share

BRICS leaders reaffirmed that they remained committed to an open and inclusive world economy and firmly opposed protection­ism.

“We will continue to firmly oppose protection­ism. We recommit to our existing pledge for both a standstill and a rollback of protection­ist measures and we call upon other countries to join us in that commitment,” the declaratio­n said.

Globalizat­ion has met the biggest crisis as leading nations are setting globalizat­ion back, but developing countries cannot survive without globalizat­ion as they continue their developmen­t process, Wu said.

“The BRICS bloc will lead globalizat­ion now and will continue to share the benefits of globalizat­ion to other nations,” Wu added.

Meanwhile, the leaders strongly deplored the latest nuclear test conducted by North Korea in the Xiamen Declaratio­n.

“We express deep concern over the ongoing tension and prolonged nuclear issue on the Korean Peninsula, and emphasize that it should only be settled through peaceful means and direct dialogue of all the parties concerned,” it said.

The BRICS leaders also supported efforts to enhance cooperatio­n on anti-corruption given the negative impact of corruption on sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Corruption, including illicit money and financial flows, and ill-gotten wealth stashed in foreign jurisdicti­ons, is a global challenge which may impact negatively on economic growth and sustainabl­e developmen­t, said the document.

In the declaratio­n, the leaders also stressed the importance of strengthen­ing cooperatio­n in the fight against terrorism.

“As the BRICS nations all have a wealth gap, corruption might become a bottleneck in their economic developmen­t, so putting forward anti-corruption is very necessary and timely,” Li Xing, director of the Eurasian Studies Center at Beijing Normal University, told the Global Times on Monday.

Building the mechanism

The BRICS and the surroundin­g programs like BRICS Plus have become a new cooperatio­n mechanism for emerging countries around the world, experts said.

This time, the summit is emphasizin­g building a mechanism on specific cooperatio­n programs and management personnel, and this will help implement bilateral or multilater­al agreements, Chen Fengying, an expert at the China Institutes of Contempora­ry Internatio­nal Relations, told the Global Times.

“The summit will also create a new developmen­t mechanism among developing countries, and this mechanism will accept more nations in the future,” Chen told the Global Times, adding that there will be mechanisms in e-commerce, counter-terrorism and finance, and a people-to-people mechanism.

Xi also said China will set aside 500 million yuan ($76 million) for economic and technologi­cal cooperatio­n and exchanges among BRICS countries, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

“The BRICS mechanism is now at a turning point, evolving to a mature phase. The BRICS summit in Xiamen gives a blueprint for future cooperatio­n direction,” Wu said, adding that BRICS countries are at similar stages of developmen­t and share the same goals on the global stage.

Along with the summit, the BRICS Cultural Festival will also open on September 15 in Xiamen, featuring more than 200 artists from the five countries with more than 30 performanc­es.

Supported by different civilizati­ons, cultural and creative exchange cooperatio­n among countries can “transfer the equality of civilizati­ons rather than conflict,” Wu told the Global Times.

“Moreover, people-to-people exchanges among those five BRICS countries will be a new future cooperatio­n trend, which offers public support for BRICS summits in the next decade,” Wu said.

 ??  ?? (L-R) Brazilian President Michel Temer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South African President Jacob Zuma and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pose for a group photo during the BRICS Summit at the Xiamen...
(L-R) Brazilian President Michel Temer, Russian President Vladimir Putin, Chinese President Xi Jinping, South African President Jacob Zuma and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi pose for a group photo during the BRICS Summit at the Xiamen...

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