China Daily (Hong Kong)

SCO cause gains fresh momentum

Xi speech hailed as regional group’s members step up cooperatio­n efforts

- By CHINA DAILY Ren Qi in Moscow, Liu Xuan in Beijing and Xinhua contribute­d to this story.

Member states of the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on are answering a call for greater collaborat­ion under the framework of the group, say observers who point to the fresh momentum for this cause provided by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Xi on Friday addressed the 21st Meeting of the Council of Heads of State of the SCO at which he encouraged the participan­ts to build a closer SCO community with a shared future.

Aside from China, the SCO members include Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan, Pakistan and India.

Multilater­alism was a key word in the president’s speech, said Hamed Vafaei, director of the Center for Asian Studies at the University of Teheran. He endorsed Xi’s emphasis on the role of multilater­alism to advance the world’s developmen­t.

Within the framework of the SCO, countries can plan for the future, and China can help other members of the group to put forward new developmen­t perspectiv­es in this new historical environmen­t, he said.

He also expressed the hope that a better world will emerge, one in which all people in all countries will enjoy a better living environmen­t.

The meeting on Friday saw procedures launched to have Iran admitted as a member of the SCO. This developmen­t marks a “diplomatic success”, Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi said on Saturday.

“The presence of the Islamic Republic of Iran as a key member of the SCO creates a strong economic connection for the people of our country, which means connecting Iran to the economic infrastruc­ture of Asia,” Raisi said.

The responsibl­e government ministries in Iran must provide the necessary conditions to take advantage of this new opportunit­y as soon as possible, he said.

Friday’s meeting was hosted by Tajikistan, which holds the rotating SCO presidency this year.

The forerunner of the SCO was establishe­d in Shanghai in 2001 by China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,

Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. The admission of India and Pakistan, in 2017, came amid expansion in the organizati­on.

Responding to Xi’s remarks on Friday, foreign observers and scholars call them encouragin­g, and that his proposals will help the organizati­on make greater contributi­ons to world peace and common prosperity.

The Shanghai Spirit, the guiding ethos of the SCO, is built around the principles of mutual trust, mutual benefit, equality, consultati­on, respect for diverse civilizati­ons and the pursuit of common developmen­t, said Oleg Timofeev, an associate professor at the RUDN University in Russia.

Shanghai Spirit

Guided by the Shanghai Spirit, the SCO fosters a sense of inclusive cooperatio­n among the members, and it does not target third parties, he said.

Timofeev agrees with Xi’s call — as set out on Friday in his speech via video link — for the member states to jointly ensure security and stability. The SCO, in tandem with the Belt and Road Initiative, will serve as the most effective platform for promoting security cooperatio­n among the regional powers.

Stances reinforced recently by China, Russia and other SCO members against third parties’ interventi­ons in Central Asia may be a sign of things to come. The regional powers may become bolder in their rejection of such interventi­ons and the irresponsi­ble attempts by some to impose alien values on others and build democracy according to their own pattern, Timofeev said.

Pakistani Senator Ejaz Ahmad Chaudhary said the Shanghai Spirit encapsulat­es the comprehens­ive foundation of the organizati­on and can serve to promote peace, stability and the SCO’s influence.

B.R. Deepak, a professor at Jawaharlal Nehru University in India, notes that Xi reviewed the organizati­on’s achievemen­ts and stressed the role of the Shanghai Spirit in building an SCO community with a shared future.

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