20 May, 2022
Although
the other members of the group of developing countries supported the
proposal, they have yet to name the candidate countries The meeting took
place against the backdrop of Russia’s war on Ukraine and China used
the meeting to criticise Western sanctions
Chinese
foreign minister Wang Yi repeated Beijing’s position calling for peace
talks and criticised Western countries for providing arms to Ukraine and
imposing sanctions on Russia.
“Delivering
arms cannot bring peace to Ukraine, and pressure by sanctions cannot
solve the European security dilemma,” Wang said, according to a readout
from the Chinese foreign ministry.
He
said China opposes the weaponisation of international economic and
financial cooperation and coercing other countries to choose sides. He
also called for an effort to reduce the spillover effect of the war,
which has hit international trade and food supplies “especially in supporting vulnerable developing countries to tide over the difficulties”.
The minister also urged the other BRICS countries to be “independent” and “fair” over Ukraine.
Three
BRICS members – China, India and South Africa – earlier abstained from
voting on a United Nations resolution to condemn Russia for its
aggression against Ukraine.
The
joint statement, with a brief address on the Ukraine issues, said the
foreign ministers “supported Russia negotiating with Ukraine” and
“discussed concerns over the humanitarian situation in Ukraine and
beyond”.
Without naming the United States, Wang called on the bloc to resist the creation of “parallel systems” to divide the world.
He also said BRICS nations should oppose all kinds of unilateral sanctions and “long-arm jurisdiction”.
The
25-point joint statement issued after the meeting included pledges to
work together on issues such as global governance, climate change,
anti-terrorism, arms control, human rights, and AI technology.
China and Russia also expressed support for the three other members playing a greater role in the United Nations.
Argentina
was among the nine developing countries and emerging economies taking
part in a separate meeting with the BRICS countries on Thursday night.
Argentina’s
ambassador to China, Sabino Vaca Narvaja, said the invitation to take
part “was extremely important,” and constituted a step toward “formal
entry” into the bloc.
The
other eight participants were Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Egypt,
Indonesia, Nigeria, Senegal, the United Arab Emirates and Thailand.
Jiang
Shixue, director of the Centre for Latin American Studies at Shanghai
University, said the expansion of BRICS is seen as an “irreversible
trend” by many observers.
“Facing
an increasing attack by the developed countries led by the United
States, developing countries and emerging economies should expand our
strength to play a bigger role in global governance,” Jiang said.
Jiang
said China has been making efforts in this direction since the “BRICS
Plus” formulation was first mooted in 2017 with the objective of
widening the bloc’s “circle of friends”.
Xu
Hongcai, from the China Association of Policy Science, said the bloc
should invite Group of 20 countries with international influence and
large economies, such as Indonesia and Argentina.
“The
G20 is composed of major developed and developing countries, BRICS
lacks representation in ignoring other developing nations. It will be a
good idea to first select G20 member nations to join the bloc,” Xu said.