BRICS to welcome six new members, a ‘historical milestone’
Bigger BRICS family
serves as powerful response to West-led hegemony, advocates for fair,
multi-polar world
By Xie Wenting in
Johannesburg and
in Beijing Published: Aug 24, 2023
https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202308/1296926.shtml
The BRICS countries
welcomed six new members from three different continents on Thursday, marking a
historic milestone that underscored the solidarity of BRICS and developing
countries and determination to work together for a better future, officials and
experts said. The expansion of the BRICS, as a new starting point for
multilateral cooperation, will play a positive role for more equitable and just
global governance, experts said.
The BRICS countries have decided to invite six countries - Argentina, Egypt,
Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates - to become new
members of the grouping, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa said on
Thursday. It will be the first expansion since 2010 and the new candidates will
be admitted as members on January 1, 2024, according to media reports.
With the expansion of the BRICS topping the agenda of the three-day 15th BRICS
summit in Johannesburg, BRICS countries have reached a consensus on guiding
principles, standards, criteria and procedures of the grouping's expansion
process, South African President Cyril Ramaphosa told a briefing on
Thursday.
Chinese President Xi Jinping said at the briefing that the BRICS expansion is
historic and a new starting point for BRICS cooperation. It demonstrates the
determination of the BRICS countries to unite and cooperate with other
developing countries, meets the expectations of the international community,
and serves the common interests of emerging markets and developing
countries.
The expansion will also inject fresh vitality into the BRICS cooperation
mechanism, and further strengthen the forces for world peace and development,
Xi said, noting that as long as the BRICS countries pull together, a lot can be
achieved in BRICS cooperation, and a promising future awaits the BRICS
countries.
The summit also adopted the Johannesburg II Declaration, reaffirming the
countries' commitment to the BRICS spirit of mutual respect and understanding,
sovereign equality, solidarity, democracy, openness, inclusiveness, strengthened
collaboration and consensus. A consensus was reached on partnership for
inclusive multilateralism, fostering an environment of peace and development,
partnership for mutually accelerated growth, partnership for sustainable
development, deepening people-to-people exchanges and institutional
development.
The expansion of the BRICS not only demonstrated the vigorous trend of the
BRICS mechanism, far exceeding the expectations of some Western countries like
the US, but also served as a powerful response to West-led hegemony, experts
said, noting that more developing countries hoping to join the grouping showed
the expectations of strengthening their voices and autonomy in global issues,
advocating for a more equitable, just, diverse and multi-polar international
order.
New members, new momentum
"We are really very happy that this process is accelerating, so I want to
thank China and all the BRICS countries for their support," Argentine
Ambassador to China Sabino Vaca Narvaja told the Global Times on
Thursday.
"Together, we are going to represent the voice of emerging countries,
which have historically been neglected in international organizations,"
Narvaja said.
"The strengthening of the BRICS is essential for the development of the
countries of the Global South. I believe that this space represents countries
that have the same problems and the same needs, which is why it will be easier
to work together to strengthen our development," the Argentine envoy
said.
"Expanding this scope is key to building a more harmonious global order
where cooperation replaces confrontation; productive development, to financial
speculation; the principle of mutual respect, to unilateral interventionism;
economic integration, instead of anachronistic sanctions; and the transfer of
technology, replacing technological blockades," he said.
Some experts believed that the new members all play important geopolitical
roles in different regions, representing emerging economies among developing
countries, considering their GDP scales and potential future growth.
"This is a major step forward for the BRICS family, as we will expect a
stronger BRICS voice to be heard in global governance, playing an important
role for international relations to become more democratic, just and
reasonable," Wang Youming, director of the Institute of Developing
Countries at the China Institute of International Studies in Beijing, told the
Global Times on Thursday.
An expansion of the group of emerging market powers could help boost its global
heft and counter the dominance of the G7, Bloomberg said. The enlargement will
see BRICS' gross domestic product rise to 36 percent of global GDP at
purchasing power parity and 46 percent of the world's population, US media
reported, citing Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.
Egypt is eager to join the BRICS group of nations with the aim of reforming the
global economy for greater fairness in the face of ongoing world fluctuations
and economic crises, Hassan Rajab, professor at the Suez Canal University in
Egypt, told the Global Times.
He also believes that over time, countries within the BRICS group, including
Egypt, will be able to boost their own currency, the Egyptian Pound, thereby
easing the pressure of the US dollar.
"Egypt is a member of African trade associations such as the Common Market
for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA), which facilitates the entry of
Egyptian products and goods produced in Egypt into the markets of these
nations. This provides a convenient gateway for Egyptian investments, offering
a significant advantage," Rajab said.
"Through collaboration with Egypt, BRICS countries can further deepen
their partnerships with Arab and African nations. This collaboration seeks to
foster increased economic cooperation and development," he said.
De-dollarization
Besides BRICS expansion, reducing the dependence on the US dollar has also been
the focus of the summit, especially after Russian President Vladimir Putin
criticized Western sanctions in an address on Tuesday, saying
"de-dollarization" is an "irreversible" process and
"is gaining pace."
Leaders of the BRICS countries have tasked their countries' finance ministries
and central banks with considering the possibility of launching national
currencies-based payment instruments and platforms, Ramaphosa said on Thursday.
Also, the leaders stressed the importance of encouraging the use of local
currencies in international trade and financial transactions between BRICS as
well as their trading partners, and encouraging the strengthening of
correspondent banking networks between BRICS countries and enabling settlements
in local currencies, according to the declaration.
Experts believed that when major oil producers such as Saudi Arabia and Iran
join the BRICS, the oil trade will easily "undergo de-dollarization,"
something the West is worried about.
"The US should not be allowed to use the dollar to put pressure on other
countries," Professor Mohammad Marandi, Vice President of the University
of Tehran, told the Global Times in a previous interview.
Iran already sells a substantial amount of petroleum using currencies other
than the US dollar. "I think for Saudi Arabia, ultimately it will be in
its best interests to move away from the dollar as well, in order to make sure
that it is not vulnerable or less vulnerable to the US," he said.
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