The BRIC Post,
September 13, 2014
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| The SCO Council of Heads of State met in Dushanbe, Tajikistan on 12 September 2014 [PPIO] |
Russian
President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping have said
members of the Russia-China-led SCO share identical views on economic and
political cooperation, including the Ukraine crisis and subsequent sanctions.
“At the
meeting in narrow format we discussed some other current international affairs
too, including the situation in Ukraine. We are very pleased to see that we
share identical or similar views on the main areas of cooperation. This
consensus of views is reflected in the Dushanbe Declaration that we are
adopting,” said Putin.
As the US
and EU step up pressure on Moscow with a new round of sanctions, Russia is
seeking to strengthen ties with allies in the region, predominantly the SCO
members.
Putin on
Friday also warned against complacency regarding the global economy. The
Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) on Thursday said
global growth is unlikely to pick up significantly this year.
“The global
economy has not yet overcome the crisis and its problems, and the current
political risks and various restrictions and barriers are only worsening the
situation, causing direct damage to the global business climate and undermining
confidence in international trade and the financial system,” said Putin.
SCO members
will improve cooperation on security in food, transport, energy and finances,
asserted the Russian President.
“We see
great potential in the idea of developing a common SCO transport system that
would make use too of Russia’s Trans-Siberian Railway and Baikal-Amur Mainline
and be tied into China’s plans for developing the Silk Road route. I am sure
that big projects of this kind serve the interests of our organisation’s
members and would benefit all countries in Eurasia.
Meanwhile,
in Dushanbe, Chinese President Xi Jinping on Friday called for joint efforts to
fight extremism and internet terrorism among the members of the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization (SCO).
“Currently,
(we) should focus on combating religion-involved extremism and internet
terrorism,” said Xi when delivering a speech at the 14th meeting of the SCO
Council of Heads of State in the Tajik capital of Dushanbe.
He
suggested the SCO members launch consultations on an anti-extremism convention
and initiate studies on “a mechanism for actions against internet terrorism”.
“(We)
should take it as our own responsibility to safeguard regional security and
stability, enhance our ability to maintain stability, continue to boost
cooperation on law enforcement and security, and improve the existing
cooperation mechanisms,” said Xi.
The
president also called on the SCO members — China, Kazakhstan,Kyrgyzstan,
Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan — to urgently grant the group’s Regional
Counter-Terrorism Structure (RCTS) new functions to combat drug trafficking.
“(We)
should make concerted efforts to crack down on the ‘three evil forces’ of
terrorism, extremism and separatism,” Xi said.
The
presidents of Russia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and China
signed a package of agreements following the summit. The documents signed
include the Dushanbe Declaration.
Russia
takes over as acting chair of the organization and will host the next SCO
leaders summit in 2015 in Ufa.

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