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Turkish Foreign Minister Reaffirms Ankara’s Desire to Become Part of Brics Bloc
Tuesday, June 25, 2024

China is ready to strengthen strategic alignment with Turkey to counter “power politics” on the international stage, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Turkish counterpart, Hakan Fidan, in Beijing.

“The two sides agreed on the need for close strategic communication ... to safeguard the common interests of developing countries,” Wang said, according to a Chinese statement.

Wang said Beijing was willing to continuously expand cooperation with Ankara in economics, trade, energy, infrastructure, and the hi-tech and digital economy.

“China is willing to continue to strengthen coordination and cooperation with the Turkish side within the framework of the United Nations and the Group of 20, to oppose all forms of hegemony and power politics, and to maintain the stability of the global supply chain,” he was quoted as saying.

Fidan began the trip with talks with security chief Chen Wenqing and by attending a dialogue organised by the Centre for China and Globalisation (CCG), a Beijing think tank.

During the dialogue, Fidan said the China-backed Brics grouping could offer Turkey a “good alternative” to the European Union to boost its economic prospects.

He said that while Turkey was in a customs union with Brussels, it was also exploring new opportunities for cooperation with several partners in different platforms such as Brics, an association of 10 emerging economies.

“Certainly, we would like to become a member of Brics. So we’ll see how it goes this year,” he said.

Erdogan declared his country’s intention to join six years ago at the Brics summit in Johannesburg but there has been little progress since then.

Speaking at the CCG event, Fidan said that one of the important pillars of Turkey’s foreign policy was to form strong economic ties in an institutional form. He said that due to “identity politics”, Turkey has never been allowed in by some major EU nations to become a full member of the European bloc though it had been trying to join for a long time.

“So you have to look for other alternatives,” Fidan said.

Although noting that Brics still “has a long way to go”, “we cannot ignore the fact that Brics, as an important cooperation platform, offers some other countries a good alternative,” he said.

“We see potential in Brics,” he added.

In Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said the doors of Brics were “open to representatives of the most diverse economic and political systems and macro-regions”.

“The only condition is that you must agree to work on the basis of the key principle of the sovereign equality of states,” he said.

Fidan said investment and trade issues were parts of his agenda during his China trip, noting that the two countries were still “far behind” in making the most of their economic potential.

He said Turkey welcomed Chinese investment in the country, especially in key infrastructure projects, but in recent years, there had been a slowdown in joint investment projects.

“This is one of the things that I want to raise while I’m here in China, to really fix this slowdown, to try to speed it up, to identify what are the obstacles, what are the reasons that we are experiencing this slowdown,” he said, adding that he would also discuss ways to balance bilateral trade.

In the first four months of this year, China’s exports to Turkey fell 5.1 per cent from a year earlier in US dollar terms while imports were down 4.4 per cent, according to Chinese customs data.

South China Morning Post

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