- Chinese expert says India may hold back economic cooperation as an SCO member
BEIJING: The SCO (Shanghai Cooperation Organisation) Summit has attracted particular attention as a result of the participation of the leaders of Pakistan and India as full members for the first time.
“The enlargement will certainly bring value to SCO in terms of maintaining regional peace and strengthening economic cooperation,” Chen Yu, assistant research fellow at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, told the China Global Television Network (CGTN).
Chen pointed out that there were many benefits that can be reaped from the expansion. Accepting Pakistan and India’s membership will aid the SCO to gain influence in the region and even the world. The SCO will be capable of contributing more to regional peace and encourage economic cooperation, he said.
“Pakistan, for example, is very influential in Afghanistan. A Pakistan membership will bring great benefits, such as structure and stability to Afghanistan and even central Asia,” he said. “The SCO creates a new platform for China to combat terrorism in central Asia through cooperation with Pakistan,” he said.
Apart from assistance brought by Pakistan with regards to the Afghanistan issue, Chen reckons that the public in Pakistan will definitely benefit from the SCO via a more powerful economy and improved infrastructure. Though the SCO will certainly reap rewards from gaining a larger membership base, there were few challenges that can also come up, he said.
Chen states that the SCO proposes principles of mutual trust, mutual benefit and mutual respect, designed to encourage its members to deal with regional affairs by negotiation. “Given the long-term disputes between Pakistan and India as a result of territory and religions, I am afraid that their divergences will be detrimental to the principle of solving problems through negotiation,” he said.
Furthermore, a bigger SCO may make economic cooperation among its member states more complicated. Although Pakistan has always advocated the Belt Road Initiative, India still hasn’t actively partaken. He worries that India may hold back economic cooperation as an SCO member.
He pointed out that India proposes to add English as one of the official languages on the board, but this may prove controversial with members questioning why it was necessary to use English as an official language in an organisation that was primarily made up of none-English speaking countries. “Regardless of all these challenges, a bigger SCO will be a better platform in the long run,” he said.