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Pakistan to attain full SCO representation: Musharraf

Kaiser

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Pakistan to attain full SCO representation: Musharraf



Sunday June 18, 2006 (0059 PST)

ISLAMABAD: President Musharraf has expressed optimism that Pakistan would be able to attain full representation in Shangai Cooperation Organization (SCO).


He was talking to media-people after his return from Kazhikstan Capitol Alma Atta on Saturday. He said that Pakistan could play an important part bridging the gap between SCO countries, which is understood by the member countries, and would help Pakistan attain its economic and political gains.
He said that the Charter of the organization stresses on war against terrorism and extremism, and providing economic relief and cooperation to member states, and these very factors are, undoubtly a special forte of Pakistan.
He said that Pakistan was already playing an active part in war against terrorism and extremism. Whereas economically, Pakistan is the most formidable economic Gateway, being strategically located amidst all the member countries. He said that India and Iran are also the delegates to SCO.

http://www.paktribune.com/news/index.php?id=147201
 
dont no how u guys gona get along with indians in the SCO..... but china would always by ur side.....
 
Pakistan can play greater role in SCO: Musharraf


ISLAMABAD: President General Pervez Musharraf has said that Pakistan can play a key role in Shangai Cooperation Organization (SCO) as Pakistan geographically situated at strategic location.


President Musharraf while giving an interview to Radio China said that Beijing can help Pakistan as energy corridor due to our geographic location and it is important thing is the future.
He said that Pakistan can provide a linkage facility for trade and commercial activity to SCO countries with remaining world including Middle East and Gulf States. He said that Pakistan and India are enjoying observer status in SCO but India cannot play any role regarding provide trade facilities to Central Asia, it can happen only through Pakistan, he added.
Pervez Musharraf said that Pakistan can play a vital role in increasing economic activity among SCO countries, adding that we are already playing leading role in curbing extremism and terrorism. Pakistan carries great importance to SCO as what is written in its charter is very suitable for Pakistan.
General Musharraf has termed the summit successful as all the leaders held talks about further promotion of the organization. The relations among the member countries would further strengthen by the summit, he added.
General Musharraf while answering a question, said that the organization charter mainly focus on security, counter terrorism, extremism and to work against separatism, to coordinate for economic development, commercial and trade relationship.
President Musharraf in a question said that Pakistan and China are celebrating 55th anniversary of their diplomatic relations and during this period our relationship is evergreen, time-tested, he added. He said that Pakistan and China are enjoying broad based and long-term cooperation in each sector of life including economic, trade, defence, social and education. President Musharraf has termed the 21st century as the century of economic development and said that economy, trade and commercial ties have much importance.
General Pervez Musharraf has mentioned his meeting with Chinese President in which both leaders are agreed to further enhance the existing relations in different fields. Pakistani President while commenting on importance of exchange of delegation on people level between the two countries, said that these exchanges are very necessary as if new generation will not interact with each other then it will forget the friendship and relationship between the old generations. He while highlighted the importance of interaction between youth of the two countries said that we should send students to each other country in different universities to get education. It is very necessary for transfer of close and friendly attitude in the next generation, he added.
 
master_fx said:
dont no how u guys gona get along with indians in the SCO..... but china would always by ur side.....

Geeez you guys! does everything have to be a India vs Pakistan thing? come now, it's high time those two Nations and their people got along.
 
TexasJohn said:
Geeez you guys! does everything have to be a India vs Pakistan thing? come now, it's high time those two Nations and their people got along.

Not aslong as india is killing muslims and until india stops its killings in IOK (indian occupied kashmir) I dont see a reason to get along

Anyways thats another problem lets not off topic
 
TexasJohn said:
Geeez you guys! does everything have to be a India vs Pakistan thing? come now, it's high time those two Nations and their people got along.

Not aslong as india is killing muslims and until india stops its killings in IOK (indian occupied kashmir) I dont see a reason to get along

Anyways thats another problem lets not get off topic
 
Kaiser said:
Not aslong as india is killing muslims and until india stops its killings in IOK (indian occupied kashmir) I dont see a reason to get along

Anyways thats another problem lets not get off topic

You are right - I am not going to get sucked into that discussion. I have listened to both sides of that. I think SCO will evolve into something worthwhile. India and Pakistan will have to get along. Would that bother you?
 
Friday, June 23, 2006javascript:; http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/print.asp?page=2006\06\23\story_23-6-2006_pg3_2


The SCO embodies many of the principles that India invoked in writing resounding declarations with Moscow. But now that the SCO is poised to go far beyond the pieties of anti-terrorism and anti-separatism and demarcate a part of the globe that would have nearly half the world population and a large portion of its known energy resources, it is beginning to act coy

India and Pakistan have been engaged in an uninterrupted multi-level and multi-dimensional dialogue for nearly three years. Opinions would vary, perhaps sharply, on what has been achieved so far and what still defies meaningful progress. The glass may be seen as half-full or half- empty. But even a rudimentary analysis of the situation would show that multilateral diplomacy, especially in regional organisations, offers opportunities to narrow down differences on many issues and discover perfectly negotiable paths for pursuing common interests. Such a discovery would doubtless impact favourably on the onerous effort in the so-called secret channels reportedly grappling with proposals to resolve difficult bilateral issues.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) certainly provides one forum where the two sub-continental powers could put aside zero-sum games and pool their creative resources, as indeed, talent to strengthen the six-nation grouping to their common advantage. The just concluded summit marked the 5th anniversary of the original Shanghai Five transforming themselves into an organisation that has now Russia, China, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan as members with India, Pakistan, Iran and Mongolia as observers. All of them except India participated at the level of the head of state. Afghanistan, a strategic neighbour, which does not as yet have even an observer-status, was present at the summit as a special guest in the person of President Karzai. India was, however, represented by its petroleum minister.

Viewed from energy-starved South Asia which has a particularly high stake in energy-related diplomacy and which may, as a region, also benefit from a multi-polar world order, the situation at the summit was ironic. Over the years Pakistan has accumulated much frustration as its ambitious Central Asia policy was constrained by disorder in Afghanistan. At the conceptual level, Pakistan had to overcome a wall of distrust with Russia and perhaps smaller obstacles with the fellow Muslim states on the other side of the Oxus. But the last two summits of SCO engaged Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz and President Musharraf personally and Pakistan went to the fifth summit with an intensely argued brief for full membership on the basis of great dividends for itself as well as the organisation.

The professionals in the Pakistan Foreign Office would surely have alerted their president to the possibility that too strong a plea for full membership might be a trifle unseasonable. Donald Rumsfeld had already launched a broadside at Iran’s presence in a summit which focuses on terrorism in the hope that his special semantics would confuse the enlargement issue. Moscow knew of New Delhi’s new ambivalence and would not have committed itself wholeheartedly to a debate on this question when Pakistan loomed large but India was fading away on the horizon — by choice.

Musharraf made the right choice. Even if the musical metaphor militated against it, he struck a powerful chord by committing his rhetoric to Pakistan’s desire to join the organisation and, no less importantly, to what Pakistan could do for it. In the emerging strategic environment, President Putin’s announcement that Gazprom would be ready to participate in the Iran-Pakistan-India gas pipeline was a note in a major key. Despite what Rumsfeld said, and perhaps because of it, SCO members and observers had no quarrel with Iran’s energy policies. Nuclear weapon capability apart, no regional power is impressed by anti-Iran terrorism charge. What the leaders of Iran and Uzbekistan said bilaterally may well reflect the general drift of thought in SCO.

By comparison, India seems to have been hobbled by the immense weight of prudence demanded, in its judgment, by the state of play in its strategic breakthrough with the United States. President Bush has still to steer his agreement with Manmohan Singh through the Congress. Its implications for US legislation on nuclear issues, global non-proliferation regimes and South Asia are momentous. Congressional scrutiny remains a delicate matter even if the outcome is reasonably guaranteed. India must have calculated that it was not the right moment to assume a high profile in a regional organisation that is beginning to attract pre-emptive diplomatic fire from the West as the Warsaw Pact of the East, forcing its founding members to issue urgent disclaimers.

But is prudence during the congressional passage of the ‘India bill’ the only reason for India’s procrastination? If so, the portents are not too bad. But India may well be moving away from an active participation in the creation of a more balanced world order. Its stand on the Iranian issue in the IAEA was an early warning of the implications of its new partnership with the United States. SCO embodies many of the principles that India invoked in writing resounding declarations with Moscow. For India, they meant instant support on curbing the uprising in Kashmir. But now that SCO is poised to go far beyond the pieties of anti-terrorism and anti-separatism and demarcate, for open-ended cooperation, a part of the globe that would have nearly half the world population and a large portion of its known energy resources, it is beginning to act coy.

There is no chance of a militaristic NATO vs SCO battle lines in the region. But inevitably there would be rivalry and competition for sources of energy and the pipelines that carry it. If Iran and Pakistan become full members, a vast stretch of land from the Pacific to the Gulf and deep into South Asia undergoes a subtle strategic change. India can extend it to the limits of the Indian Ocean. Will India opt for that or weigh in on the other side to strengthen the United States’ bid for dominance? Russia has legitimate interests in the region and China is driven both by economy and national security to support all moves that prevent hegemony by any single power over this crucial area. In the Foreign Office and elsewhere, Pakistan has the expertise to read the next generation great game. It is time to put this expertise to maximum use. The fifth SCO summit has set the agenda.

The writer is a former foreign secretary who can be contacted at tanvir.a.khan@gmail.com
 
Economics of SCO and opportunities for Pakistan
By Mehmood-Ul-Hassan Khan
The 2006 annual summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) was held in Shanghai. It will be remembered as an important milestone in the development of the regional organisation. Members of the SCO issued a declaration on its fifth anniversary of founding which covers all the aspects of socio-economic development, human prosperity, regional security, and above all a sense of closed cooperation among the member states including the observer countries. The heads of state of China, Russia, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan along with the presidents of Pakistan, Iran, Magnolia and Afghanistan also attended the meeting as observer.

Moreover, the annual summit of the SCO sent a clear signal that the member economies will intensify all-round cooperation and strive to turn the region into a harmonious one with lasting peace and common prosperity.

Agreements

The presidents of the six SCO members signed 10 documents, including a declaration on the SCO’s fifth anniversary, a joint communique on closer SCO cooperation, a statement on international information security, an anti-terrorism resolution for 2007-2009 period, an agreement on joint anti- terrorism actions among member countries, and an agreement on cutting off the infiltration channels of terrorists, separatists and extremists. It also outlines clear guidelines for the SCO’s future activities of cooperation in trade, investment, finance, education and combating against terrorism, separatism and extremism as well as drug trafficking. At the summit, the leaders agreed to improve the SCO’s internal structure, carry out agreements, boost cooperation in specific projects, and expand exchanges and cooperation with observers and related international organisations.

Business opportunities

The President General Pervez Musharraf attended the meeting and exchanged views on terrorism, economic cooperation, regional peace and respect for international law. The President projected Pakistan as an energy-cum-trade corridor that could connect Central Asia with the Arabian Sea. He also expressed the desire to extend the IPI gas pipeline to China (extension to China along the Karakoram Highway on to Xinjiang).

It is estimated that Pakistan may get diversified socio-economic benefits from SCO’s economic deals. According to the president, the country was planning to build refining facilities at Gwadar port with the help of China.
The port can become an important alternate energy and trans-shipment port. Pakistan is also developing road infrastructure linking Gwadar and other ports of the country to Central Asia. This would provide this resource-rich region the shortest route to the Arabian Sea and the world.

Some $US 2 billion worth of business contracts and loan agreements have been inked in the 5th SCO meeting. Chinese Vice Minister of Commerce, Yu Guangzhou, said Pakistan would equally benefit from the SCO’s economic deals as soon as it gets full membership. A highway running through the centre of Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, high-voltage power lines in Tajikistan and a major cement plant in Kyrgyzstan are on the list. More than 500 business people from the six countries took part to exchange views on trade, investment and financing.

President General Pervez Musharraf has also offered an energy corridor to China linking it with Central Asia and the Middle East. If Pakistan obtains membership of the SCO, the pressure it faces from the US is likely to ease. The presence of so many dignitaries from Eurasia symbolises that nearly half of the world’s total population has come united under the banner of the "Shanghai Spirit" seen as the soul of the young SCO.

Volume of trade among members

The levels of imports-exports among the SCO member states are on the rise. The trade of machinery and electronic products, high-tech goods and well-known brand products are moving in the right direction. According to the Chinese Custom department (2006), trade between China and other five SCO members hit $US37 billion in 2005, up 212 per cent over that of 2001 when the SCO was founded. Investments and joint venture projects between SCO members enhanced to $US15 billion. The main areas and sectors of economic activities have been ranging from oil and gas exploration, transportation, telecommunication, electricity, chemical industry, construction material, project contract and agriculture.

According to an action plan adopted by a meeting of SCO government heads in 2004, the six member countries will join hands in 127 economic and technological projects, which will require $US10 billion on the whole. It is agreed that SCO members will host an industry and business forum and announce the official establishment of an entrepreneur’s council on the sidelines of the summit.

Regional economic cooperation

The SCO has instituted a roadmap for regional economic cooperation which includes three leaps/steps to facilitate trade and investment, to deepen economic cooperation and to realise the free flow of goods, capital, services and technology. A network of energy, transportation and telecommunication in the region will be established. The US$900 million buyer’s credit China promised in 2004 to grant to member countries has been earmarked for different projects. The SCO Bank Syndicate, founded in November 2005 to finance multilateral projects, has also made steps forward.

The SCO also has five working groups in different member countries to tap e-commerce, customs, quality control, investment promotion and border trade potential, and cut down trade and investment costs. On-going energy diplomacy (oil and gas exploration) within the region and especially among the SCO member states and observing countries are on the rise. An oil pipeline linking China with Kazakhstan (20 million tons of oil a year) has been completed. In the south, Iran and Pakistan are planning a gas pipeline, which might be extended to India as well. Afghanistan will be linked with Pakistan to supply gas from Turkmenistan. It shows the SCO’s interest in forging links with Iran, Pakistan, India and Afghanistan.

Socio-economic strength

The six SCO member countries take up 60 per cent of Eurasia while their population accounts for a quarter of the world’s total. The six economies reported a combined GDP of US$1.5 trillion in 2004. The investment between SCO members has surged to US$15 billion, covering mainly the oil and gas exploration, transportation, telecommunication, electricity, chemical industry, construction material, project contract and agriculture.

In order to promote trade and economic cooperation among SCO members, China pledged in 2004 to offer US$900 million of preferential export buyer’s credit to other SCO members.

According to official reports, China’s actual investment in the other five SCO members totalled US$8 billion last year, four times the 2001 figure. China shares 14,799 km of borderline with SCO members and observer countries.
On another level, SCO members have signed 127 cooperation programs and set up seven professional work teams to promote multilateral cooperation in product quality inspection, customs, e-commerce, investment promotion, transportation, energy and the telecommunications sectors. The SCO members have maintained GDP growth rates of six to eight per cent on average in recent years. Prior to the SCO annual meeting, a number of bilateral agreements in the energy sphere were signed between China and Russia. These include a production sharing agreement for the Kurmangazy offshore field in the Caspian which provides for investment of $US23 billion by both the countries.

Canadian research study

According to a Canadian research study (2006) the SCO will be an economic powerhouse and a major global force. Emerging economic powers like India and China, as well as resource-rich states as Russia and Kazakhstan, will be a powerhouse of economic activity and hence will play a major role in the global force.

Conclusion

The booming economy of Pakistan needs easy and secured supply of energy and SCO would be the ideal platform. The shared borders among the SCO member countries and observers will become a link for regional development, source of foreign direct and private investments, joint ventures, peace and stability. Pakistan’s geo-strategic position provides ideal opportunity for the country, which may enhance our economic cushion.


http://jang.com.pk/thenews/jun2006-weekly/busrev-19-06-2006/p2.htm
 
however as long as we all have one thing in mind(kick US out of asia) i am sure we will get along fine in SCO.......
 
master_fx said:
however as long as we all have one thing in mind(kick US out of asia) i am sure we will get along fine in SCO.......
Nobody wants to kick US out of Asia.
The nature of SCO is to become an economic powerhouse rather than a military one.
To become a powerhouse we need competition from Japan, the EU and the USA!
 

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