Tag Archives: BRICS Summit

Brazil’s foreign minister highlights BRICS’ commitment to multilateralism

BRICS foreign ministers gathered in Rio de Janeiro on Tuesday for the second and final day of meetings, bringing together representatives from all 11 member states.

In a news conference following the gathering, Brazil’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Mauro Vieira presented a statement from the BRICS presidency summarising their discussions.

He highlighted the bloc’s commitment to a more cooperative and balanced global order and the need to amplify the voice of the Global South.

Without naming the United States, ministers had voiced concerns about the rise in protectionist measures which they said were inconsistent with World Trade Organisation rules.

“It is not in the interest of Brazil or our BRICS partners to live in a fractured world. We need to strengthen multilateralism and cooperation as tools to address contemporary challenges,” said Viera.

The bloc of 11 developing nations face daunting challenges from the Trump administration’s unilateral tariffs which have raised concerns about a global economic slowdown.

Vieira said the group also discussed the role of BRICS in promoting peace, resolving conflicts peacefully, and overcoming global crises.

He said there were also statements about the need to strengthen the role of the United Nations.

“Especially highlighting the urgency of reforming the Security Council, to make it more representative, legitimate, and effective, particularly with greater participation from Africa, Asia, and Latin America.”

It was the first time the expanded BRICS, comprising both the original members and new partner countries admitted in 2024, met formally as a unified group.

The bloc now includes Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Saudi Arabia, Egypt, the United Arab Emirates, Iran, Ethiopia, and Argentina.

The ministerial meeting was in the lead-up to the 16th BRICS Summit, which will bring together the heads of state in Rio de Janeiro in July.

Source: Africanews

Trump’s Threats Investigation, Louisiana 10 Commandments, Russia’s BRICS Summit

An NPR investigation has found former President Donald Trump has made more than 100 threats to investigate, prosecute, jail or otherwise punish his perceived opponents – including private citizens. A federal court in Louisiana is weighing whether a state law requiring the Ten Commandments be displayed in public schools is constitutional. And Russian President Vladimir Putin is hosting a summit of world leaders despite the west trying to isolate him over the war in Ukraine.

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My Take On It:  African leaders, youth are sick tired of manipulation, plunder of continent

     

34I will defend this city and save it, for my sake and for the sake of David my servant.’ ” 35That night the angel of the Lord went out and put to death a hundred and eighty-five thousand in the Assyrian camp. When the people got up the next morning—there were all the dead bodies! 36So Sennacherib king of Assyria broke camp and withdrew. He returned to Nineveh and stayed there. 2 Kings 19:34, 35

35 I have seen a wicked and ruthless man flourishing like a luxuriant native tree, 36 but he soon passed away and was no more; though I looked for him, he could not be found. 37 Consider the blameless, observe the upright; a future awaits those who seek peace. – Psalm 37:35-37

Rulers and the people of nations outside Africa (made up of people that do not look like us (Black folk) in 1619 waged an undeclared war on Africa and its people.

The war rages on, and African leaders and youth are on a “war cry of wolf,” such that the undeclared war against Africa, this week escalated with the entry into the fray of the BRICS Summit, a familiar to but not doing things like the NATO alliance.

BRICS, a giant of another kind this past week at the BRICS Summit has commenced its addition strategy by adding six very influential players in world politics (Argentina, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates) to its membership.

The BRICS, a bloc made up of the world’s top emerging economies, has taken a major step in expanding its reach and influence with the membership increase.

The three African countries, with rallying points from vocal African leaders, whose voices are being championed by African continent media choristers like Swahili Nation Network and Cool Buzz, and young African populations that makeup close to two-thirds of the continent’s 1,465,715,361 (in other words, 1.5 billion) people.

China and India trail Africa with 1.41 billion each. These are no mean statistics. But of all the colonial powers that colonized Africa and other areas, France is the worst of the cruel, demeaning, and plunderers such as the British, the Dutch, Portugal, and Germany. These past weeks, African leaders and youth have spewed venom and screams and shouts of “get out of Africa.”

AS African leaders continue to make front-page headlines (appearing mostly in African media), young people or the elders who chose to forget, is it good to remember how Africa got to where it is now?

How is it that the European Union can have the temerity, the deception of helping Africa when all it is doing is entering through the back door to recolonize it and other areas? What urgent action can be taken to STOP this daylight plunder, abuse, and manipulation of the continent and its vast empowering mineral resources?

The first step is that of Africa taking back the narrative about Africa, its leaders, and the story of Africa. The general narrative about Africa is the widespread poverty and corrupt leaders.

As for poverty, the recent coup in former French colonies highlights the way the French have been plundering its colonies like Mali, Burkina Faso, and Niger. France came in to take from the bellies of the African soil such precious minerals like uranium, and turn it into electricity, making billions of dollars; it then turned around and threw some pennies to its former colonies.

On how Africa continues to wallow in poverty complicated by West-inspired corruption, it would be good to recall the lineup of Africa’s connection with imperialist European nations.

As explorers “discovered” lands in the new world, their need for labor turned them to Africa, plundering human resources. This was followed by colonialism, independence complete with propped-up dictators, and the call for democratization of nations on the continent.

The latter was a weak excuse for the Western allies to redirect vast resources of the World Bank and IMF from Africa to the newly formed East European nations (former Soviet Union satellites).

Africa is home to the world’s poorest nations the world, it is also home to some precious minerals including, gold, diamonds, bauxite, uranium, rubies, iron ore deposits, and oil.

The Western allies, joined in recent decades by China, India, and Russia, have come to Africa like it their backyards, and excavated the resources, in many cases causing in-country factions to fight each other. Not a single one of these foreign nations police or cautions each other, the smoke screen of human rights in Africa is a call that is hypocritical and only serves as the screen hiding their own inhuman treatment of African nations.

With the African leaders and youth all fired up with the empowering BRICS, the One Africa advocates are in a sense calling a cease and desist to the wanton plunder of Africa’s resources. Joining this frenzied call is South African President Cyril Ramaposa, advocating for Africa to process its resources, Africa to join hands, and solve its own problems.

In other words, stop plundering Africa, stop improvising Africa, and stop trying to recolonize Africa through deceptive means like the ACP-EU post-Cotonou Agreement; most of all African nations should no longer allow any foreigners to the continent to demean humiliate, disgrace, or lower the respectability of Africa’s leaders.

Africa must stand together to stop the European Union from forcing African leaders to sign the deceptive ACP-EU Cotonou Agreement. The agreement is seeped with all the signs of corrupt richer nations taking advantage of poorer nations.

The time has come that African nations are truly regarded as equals on the global platform, with respect for their people, with their own social values.

In this, the West must stop bullying African nations on the calls for human rights that are advancing elements that are not in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR).

As a youth in Africa, write to your members of parliament and other leaders requesting them not to sign the ACP-EU, which is a devious move to amend African laws on abortion, sexuality education to minors, and the LGBTQ agenda.

Your action matters:

1. Brief your government, parliaments, colleagues within the AU, RECs, and your UN delegations about the harmful ACP-EU Agreement elements by sharing this document and other resources that will soon be posted (by Oct. 31) on a new site at www.DeviousEUTreaty.org;

2. Request the European Commission to provide written assurances that no provisions in this binding Agreement will be interpreted to promote abortion, CSE, or LGBT rights that have not achieved consensus at the UN; and

3. Clarify with the European Commission whether this treaty is to be understood to trump national laws and clarify who will be the custodians of the financial aid.

CONCLUSION

13For I am the Lord your God who takes hold of your right hand and says to you, Do not fear; I will help you.- Isaiah 41:13

Leaders kick off BRICS summit with Business Forum

South African president Cyril Ramaphosa, Brazilian president Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao and Russian delegations opened this year’s BRICS summit with the Business Forum on Tuesday.

The Russian President reiterated his promise to deliver grain to six African countries free of charge, in a pre-recorded video, and emphasized that Russia will only return to the Black Sea grain deal if all obligations are met.

Russia had been saying for months that conditions for the deal’s extension had not been fulfilled.

“We refused to further extend this so-called ‘deal’ after July 18, and we will be ready to return to it, but only if all obligations to the Russian side are actually fulfilled. I have repeatedly said that our country is able to replace Ukrainian grain both on a commercial basis and as free-of-charge assistance to needy states, especially as we again expect an excellent harvest this year,” announced Vladimir Putin.

Putin said in July that he wanted an end to sanctions on the Russian Agricultural Bank. 

Other demands include the resumption of supplies of agricultural machinery and parts, lifting restrictions on insurance and reinsurance, the resumption of the Togliatti-Odesa ammonia pipeline and the unblocking of assets and the accounts of Russian companies involved in food and fertilizer exports.

Russia has repeatedly explained that the deal largely benefits richer nations.

According to the UN world food program 2.2 percent of the 32.9 million tons of exported Ukrainian grain went to African countries such as Ethiopia and Somalia while 44% of exports were shipped to high income countries. 

The BRICS are an increasingly important forum for Russia at a time when its economy is grappling with Western sanctions linked to the war in Ukraine, and it is seeking to establish new diplomatic and trade relations with Asia, Africa and Latin America.

President Putin said Russia was looking to develop two flagship projects in particular: a northern sea route with new ports, fuel terminals and an expanded ice-breaking fleet, and a north-south corridor linking Russian ports to shipping terminals in the Gulf and Indian Ocean. 

Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – represent more than 40% of the world’s population and the summit is expected to discuss adding new members.

Source: Africanews

South Africa beefs up security ahead of BRICS summit

Russia and China will look to gain more political and economic ground in the developing world at a summit in South Africa this week, when an expected joint dose of anti-West grumbling from them may take on a sharper edge with a formal move to bring Saudi Arabia closer.

Leaders from the BRICS economic bloc of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa will hold three days of meetings in Johannesburg’s financial district of Sandton, with Chinese premier Xi Jinping’s attendance underlining the diplomatic capital his country has invested in the bloc over the last decade-and-a-bit as an avenue for its ambitions.

Russian President Vladimir Putin will appear on a video link after his travel to South Africa was complicated by an International Criminal Court arrest warrant against him over the war in Ukraine. Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and South African President Cyril Ramaphosa will be at the summit alongside Xi.

The main summit on Wednesday – and sideline meetings Tuesday and Thursday – are expected to produce general calls for more cooperation among countries in the Global South amid their rising discontent over perceived Western dominance of global institutions.

That’s a sentiment that Russia and China are more than happy to lean into. Leaders or representatives of dozens more developing countries are set to attend the sideline meetings in Africa’s wealthiest city to give Xi and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, who will represent Putin in South Africa, a sizeable audience.

One specific policy point with more direct implications will be discussed and possibly decided on – the proposed expansion of the BRICS bloc, which was formed in 2009 by the emerging market countries of Brazil, Russia, India and China, and added South Africa the following year.

Saudi Arabia is one of more than 20 countries to have formally applied to join BRICS in another possible expansion, South African officials say. Any move toward the inclusion of the world’s second-biggest oil producer in an economic bloc with Russia and China would clearly draw attention from the United States and its allies in an extra-frosty geopolitical climate, and amid a recent move by Beijing to exert some influence in the Persian Gulf.

“If Saudi Arabia were to enter BRICS, it will bring extraordinary importance to this grouping,” said Talmiz Ahmad, India´s former ambassador to Saudi Arabia.

Even an agreement on the principle of expanding BRICS, which already consists of a large chunk of the developing world’s biggest economies, is a moral victory for the Russian and Chinese vision for the bloc as a counterbalance to the G-7, analysts say.

Both favor adding more countries to bolster a kind of coalition — even if it’s only symbolic – amid China’s economic friction with the U.S. and Russia’s Cold War-like standoff with the West because of the war in Ukraine.

Nations ranging from Argentina to Algeria, Egypt, Iran, Indonesia and United Arab Emirates have all formally applied to join alongside the Saudis, and are also possible new members.

If a number of them are brought in, “then you end up with a bigger economic bloc, and from that a sense of power,” said Prof. Alexis Habiyaremye of the College of Business and Economics at the University of Johannesburg.

While Brazil, India and South Africa are less keen on expansion and seeing their influence diluted in what’s currently an exclusive developing world club, there is momentum for it. Nothing has been decided, though, and the five countries must first agree on the criteria new members need to meet. That’s on the agenda in Johannesburg amid Beijing’s push.

“BRICS expansion has become the top trending issue at the moment,” said Chen Xiaodong, China’s ambassador to South Africa. “Expansion is key to enhancing (the) BRICS mechanism´s vitality. I believe that this year´s summit will witness a new and solid step on this front.”

The U.S. has stressed its bilateral ties with South Africa, Brazil and India in an attempt to offset any outsized Russian and Chinese influence emanating from BRICS. In the buildup to the summit, the State Department said that the U.S. was “deeply engaged with many of the leading members of the BRICS association.”

The European Union also will closely follow happenings in Johannesburg, but with almost sole focus on the war in Ukraine and the bloc’s continued effort to draw united condemnation for Russia’s invasion from the developing world, which has largely failed so far.

With Xi, Lula, Modi and Ramaphosa coming together, European Commission spokesman Peter Stano said the EU was calling on them to use the moment to uphold international law.

“We look forward to their contribution to make Putin stop his illegal, destabilizing behavior,” Stano said.

If a BRICS foreign ministers meeting in Cape Town in June, the precursor to the main summit, is anything to go by, there will be no public criticism of Russia or Putin over the war. A planned protest by the Amnesty International rights group and the Ukrainian Association of South Africa outside the Sandton Convention Centre will likely be the only condemnation heard.

If anything, Russia might see the summit as an opportunity to leverage some favor.

Having halted a deal allowing the passage of grain out of Ukraine last month, Putin might use the BRICS gathering to announce more free Russian grain shipments to developing countries, as he has already done for several African nations, said Maria Snegovaya, senior fellow at the Europe, Russia, and Eurasia Program at the Washington-based Center for Strategic and International Studies.

It would allow Putin to demonstrate “goodwill” to the developing world, Snegovaya said, while cutting Ukraine out of the process.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said Putin would have “full fledged participation” in the summit despite appearing on a video link and would make a speech.

What’s also likely to be aired regularly over the three days in Johannesburg is the developing world’s gripes over current global financial systems. That has streamlined in the months and weeks leading up to the summit into a criticism of the dominance of the U.S. dollar as the world’s currency for international trade.

BRICS experts are generally united in pointing out the difficulties the bloc has in implementing policy due to the five countries’ differing economic and political priorities, and the tensions and rivalry between China and India.

But a focus on more trade in local currencies is something all of them can get behind, said Cobus van Staden, an analyst at the China Global South Project, which tracks Chinese engagement across the developing world.

He sees BRICS pushing a move away from the dollar in regional trade in some parts of the world in the same way he sees this summit as a whole.

“None of this is the big sword that´s going to slay the dollar. That´s not the play,” said van Staden. “It´s not one big sword wound, it´s a lot of paper cuts. It won´t kill the dollar, but it´s definitely making the world a more complicated place.”

“They don´t need to defeat the dollar … and they don´t need to defeat the G-7. All they particularly want to do is raise an alternative to it. It´s this much longer play.”

and secure environment Source: Africanews

Julius Malema appeals for BRICS Summit’s boycott in South Africa


By Vincent Gunde

LILONGWE-(MaraviPost)-The Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) in South Africa has formally written BRICS leaders through their embassies and associated political parties to consider a boycott of the BRICS Summit to be held in South Africa from the 22nd to 24th of August 2023.

The EFF has made the call in response to the South African Government’s decision to effectively block Russia’s President Vladimir Putin from attending the BRICS Summit under irrational pressure and bullying by the International Criminal Court (ICC).

In a communication addressed to the heads of state of the BRICS nations, the EFF has emphasized the importance of solidarity among BRICS nations and cautions against succumbing to neo-colonial pressures from the West.

The communication has urged the BRICS nations to uphold the principles upon which they were founded; mutual respect, understanding, cooperation, and non-interference saying the absence of any member, threatens the unity, strength, and future influence of BRICS on the global stage.

“We request the BRICS leaders to stand together against external pressures and to consider the implications of their attendance or non-attendance at the Summit,” reads the communication in part.

The EFF says it believes that this matter is of utmost importance, reflecting not just the integrity and unity of the BRICS organization but also the future direction of global politics and economics.

Speaking at the FNB Stadium in Johannesburg- South Africa on EFF’s 10th Anniversary celebrations, the Leader of the EFF, Julius Malema assured the BRICS members that BRICS will be strengthened and is an alternative to Europe and America.

Malema assured the West that the South Africans are with Putin claiming that it is not the South Africans that have refused Russian President Vladimir Putin from coming into that country for BRICS Summit from 22nd to 24th August, 2023 in South Africa.

He said Putin was refused entry into South Africa by the coward South Africa’s President Cyril Ramaphosa who could not guarantee that he will not arrest Putin in line with the conditions set by the International Criminal Court (ICC) to arrest him for war crimes against humanity in Ukraine.

“We are Putin, Putin is in us, we will never support imperialism against Putin,” said Malema.