Thursday, March 29, 2012

BRICS focusses on economic, development issues/Asks antagonists to resolve suspicions over Iran’s nuclear programme through talks on multilateral fora

BRICS focusses on economic, development issues

SANDEEP DIKSHIT


Eschew politics: (From left) President Dilma Rousseff of Brazil, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, Chinese President Hu Jintao and

Asks antagonists to resolve suspicions over Iran’s nuclear programme through talks on multilateral fora

While making a strong statement on Iran and adopting a middle-of-the-road resolution on Syria, the fourth summit of BRICS largely eschewed political content and focussed on economic and development issues which included beginning the process for setting up a bank and inking two pacts to ease trade among each other.

The Delhi Declaration issued at the end of the one-day summit hinted at backing an alternate candidate for the World Bank President’s post which has always been appropriated by an American and exhorted the Bank and the International Monetary Fund to quickly realign their priorities and approach to the needs of the developing world. This is an agenda the five countries intend pursuing at the forthcoming G-20 meeting in Mexico as well.

The leaders, who held a closed door meeting that overran the allotted time, weighed the consequences of setting up a "BRICS Bank’’ and opted for a more contemplative approach by asking their Finance Ministers to examine its feasibility and report back at the next summit in Russia. Sources said the leaders agreed that the bank should in no way emerge as a competitor to the World Bank and the IMF but provide funds for projects that do not find favour with these institutions.

In line with their professed commitment to multilateralism in economic and political problem solving, the leaders agreed to invest more in the United Nations Conference on Trade & Development which had played a major role in catering to the interests of developing countries in the run up to the setting up of the World Trade Organisation.

In the political sphere, the Declaration was most explicit on Iran and Palestine while broadly endorsing the Kofi Annan approach to resolving the year-long conflict in Syria. It cautioned against using the pretext of the Arab Spring to delay resolution of the Palestine issue and believed direct talks between Ramallah and Tel Aviv would dampen some of the disquiet in the Middle East and North Africa.

The five-nation grouping’s formulation on Iran came close to condemning the West’s pressure tactics to make other countries obey their latest restrictions on trade ties, especially in the energy sphere. Saying that a conflict would have disastrous consequences, it wanted the two antagonists to resolve suspicions over Iran’s nuclear programme through talks at multilateral fora. On Afghanistan, BRICS exhorted the international community to stay the course on the development front for 10 years after the West withdraws most of its combat troops by 2014-end and, on Russia’s insistence, made a mention of checking narcotic trafficking.

China and Russia, while not endorsing the candidature of the three other BRICS members to join them as permanent members on the UN Security Council, "supported’’ their desire to play a greater role at the UN. A large part of the most exhaustive post-BRICS summit declaration issued so far was devoted to sustainability and developmental issues and approvingly noted initiatives taken by them to advance dialogue on climate change, poverty eradication and a cleaner energy mix.

An Action Plan, riding on the high implementation rate of previous work plans, has lined up a series of line-Ministry interactions so that some of the intentions expressed in the Declaration edge closer to implementation by the time of the next summit in Russia.

Keywords: New Delhi BRICS Summit, Delhi Declaration

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