Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

India, Pak cannot bring their bickering to SCO, say experts

- Sutirtho Patranobis letters@hindustant­imes.com

The internal power dynamics of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organisati­on (SCO) will ensure that new members India and Pakistan aren’t allowed to bring their bilateral problems to the grouping and disrupt its functionin­g, leading Chinese experts said on Friday.

With two giants, China and Russia, at the helm, the eightmembe­r SCO will not be become “dysfunctio­nal” like the South Asian Associatio­n for Regional Cooperatio­n (Saarc), where India is by far the dominant partner, the experts said.

“Saarc was not very successful because India was the dominant partner as the biggest power in the region. But India and Pakistan in SCO will be different. The power dynamics are different. India will not be the dominant partner and Pakistan will be in a more equal position,” said Lu Yang, a leading South Asian scholar at Tsinghua University.

The SCO charter encourages member states to settle disputes, said Zhang Henglong, vice-director of Shanghai-based Public Diplomacy Institute of the SCO.

“The SCO charter, signed on June 7, 2002, is the fundamenta­l organisati­onal principle of SCO. The charter clearly states that there will be ‘mutual respect of sovereignt­y, independen­ce, territoria­l integrity of States and inviolabil­ity of State borders, non-aggression, non-interferen­ce in internal affairs, non-use of force or threat of its use in internatio­nal relations, seeking no unilateral military superiorit­y in adjacent areas’ and ‘peaceful settlement of disputes between the member States’,” Henglong said. “These principles can help resolve conflicts within the SCO framework.”

The inclusion of India and Pakistan does complicate security ties between the eight member states, said Li Li, senior fellow at Institute for Internatio­nal Relations in Tsinghua University.

Due to the complexity of security relations between members after India and Pakistan joined SCO last year, it will take some time for the bloc to find an adapted format to promote security cooperatio­n. But SCO provides chances for India and Pakistan to engage with each other, such as the upcoming SCO joint military exercise. “It will be helpful and beneficial to improving mutual trust,” Li said.

What about difference­s between India and China over the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), President Xi Jinping’s legacy connectivi­ty project? “The BRI is only a name. If we don't think about the name and look at the essence of cooperatio­n, that will be more important,” Lu said.

Henglong said India brings more to the SCO table than just difference­s and disputes.

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