Beijing backs Teheran's bid to join regional security organisation

BEIJING • China supports Iran's membership of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) security bloc, jointly led by China and Russia, and the subject will be discussed at the group's summit this week, a senior diplomat has said.

The SCO refused to initiate Iran's accession last year despite a request from Russia which backs Teheran's bid, indicating possible divisions between Beijing and Moscow.

Iran has long knocked on SCO's door and Russia has argued that with Western sanctions against Teheran lifted, it could finally become a member of the bloc which also includes four former Soviet Central Asian republics.

Assistant Chinese Foreign Minister Li Huilai yesterday said Iran is an observer at the SCO and has for a long time "proactively participated" in its activities and also made positive contributions to the development of the organisation, Reuters reported.

"China highly appraises this. China welcomes and supports Iran's wish to become a formal member of the SCO," he told reporters, ahead of the two-day summit starting Thursday in the Kazakh capital Astana which China President Xi Jinping will attend.

"I think that at this meeting all sides will continue to conscientiously study the issue of Iran becoming a member on the basis of the SCO's relevant rules and consensus through consultations."

Beijing has close economic and diplomatic ties with Teheran, and was also instrumental in pushing through a landmark 2015 deal to curb Iran's nuclear programme.

Mr Li also said Pakistan and India will formally join the bloc as members at the summit, adding that the grouping's attraction to others and its influence continues to grow.

"More and more countries have said they hope to become dialogue partners, observers or formal members of the SCO. China welcomes countries who want to and who meet the conditions to apply to become members, observers or dialogue partners."

The inclusion of India and Pakistan, locked in a stand-off over the Kashmir region which both countries claim in its entirety, is expected to test the group's internal cohesion, the South China Morning Post in Hong Kong reported.

China said in November that it was willing to consider any application from Nato-member Turkey to join the SCO, after Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan said his country could join.

China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan formed the SCO in 2001 to fight threats posed by radical Islam and drug trafficking from neighbouring Afghanistan.

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on June 06, 2017, with the headline Beijing backs Teheran's bid to join regional security organisation. Subscribe