China to bolster non-Western alliances with Pakistan, other states at SCO summit, parade

This handout photograph released by the Russian Foreign Ministry shows China's leader Xi Jinping (C) attending a meeting of the foreign ministers of the Council of Foreign Ministers of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) in Beijing on July 15, 2025. (Photo by Handout / RUSSIAN FOREIGN MINISTRY / HANDOUT / AFP)
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Updated 28 August 2025
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China to bolster non-Western alliances with Pakistan, other states at SCO summit, parade

  • Summit will be the biggest SCO gathering since its founding, with over 20 leaders attending
  • Analysts say Beijing will woo New Delhi, though core disputes with India remain unresolved

BEIJING: China’s President Xi Jinping will host world leaders including Russia’s Vladimir Putin and India’s Narendra Modi from Sunday for a summit before a huge military parade as he seeks to showcase a non-Western style of regional collaboration.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization summit will be held Sunday and Monday, days before the military parade in nearby Beijing to mark 80 years since the end of World War II, which North Korea’s Kim Jong Un will attend.

The SCO comprises China, India, Russia, Pakistan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan and Belarus — with 16 more countries affiliated as observers or “dialogue partners.”

China and Russia have used the organization — sometimes touted as a counter to the Western-dominated NATO military alliance — to deepen ties with Central Asian states.

As China’s claim over Taiwan and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have seen them clash with the United States and Europe, analysts say the SCO is one forum where they are trying to win influence.

More than 20 leaders including Iranian and Turkish presidents Masoud Pezeshkian and Recep Tayyip Erdogan will attend the bloc’s largest meeting since its founding in 2001.

Hosting this many leaders gives Beijing a chance to “demonstrate convening power,” said Lizzi Lee from the Asia Society Policy Institute.

But substantial outcomes, she added, are not expected as the summit would be more about optics and agenda-setting.

“The SCO runs by consensus, and when you have countries deeply divided on core issues like India and Pakistan, or China and India, in the same room, that naturally limits ambition,” Lee told AFP.

Beijing wants to show it can bring diverse leaders together and reinforce the idea that global governance is “not Western-dominated,” she added.

Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Bin said Friday that the summit will bring stability in the face of “hegemonism and power politics,” a veiled reference to the United States.

Putin’s attendance comes as Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelensky insists that a meeting with him would be “the most effective way forward.”

While US President Donald Trump has pushed to broker a Ukraine-Russia summit, Moscow has ruled out any immediate Putin-Zelensky talks.

Putin at the SCO summit will likely seek to demonstrate Russia’s continued support from non-Western partners to promote its narratives of the cause of war and “how the ‘just’ end of the war will look like,” said Dylan Loh, an assistant professor at Singapore’s Nanyang Technological University.

“With Putin in the room, the war will hang over the proceedings,” Asia Society’s Lee said, but added that the topic of Ukraine would not be “front and center” of the summit.

“The SCO avoids topics that divide members, and this one obviously does,” she told AFP.

But Putin will want to show that he “is not isolated, reaffirming the partnership with Xi, and keeping Russia visible in Eurasia,” Lee added.

Modi’s visit is his first to China since 2018.

The world’s two most populous nations are intense rivals competing for influence across South Asia and fought a deadly border clash in 2020.

A thaw began last October when Modi met with Xi for the first time in five years at a summit in Russia.

Caught in geopolitical turbulence triggered by Trump’s tariff war, they have moved to mend ties.

“China will try its very best to pull out all stops to woo India, particularly capitalizing on India’s trade issues with the US,” said Lim Tai Wei, a professor and East Asia expert at Japan’s Soka University.

But fundamental differences between the countries cannot be resolved easily, he cautioned.

“Temporary respite or temperature-cooling, however, may be possible,” Lim told AFP.

Modi was not present at China’s 2015 parade and it remains unclear if he will attend this year’s.

His attendance would be “a barometer of where the geopolitical wind blows in the global contestation between the West and China,” Lim said.

China and India announced in August that they would restart direct flights, advance talks on their disputed border and boost trade.


Afghan leadership vows action against militants using its soil for cross-border attacks

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Afghan leadership vows action against militants using its soil for cross-border attacks

  • Foreign minister says Islamic Emirate has not authorized any individual or group to carry out military operations in other countries
  • Pakistan and Afghanistan have struggled to maintain a fragile truce after border clashes killed dozens in October this year

ISLAMABAD: The government in Kabul has pledged this week that Afghan territory will not be used to harm other countries and warned that anyone found violating that directive would face action by the Islamic Emirate.

The remarks by Foreign Minister Amir Khan Muttaqi came after a gathering of Afghan religious scholars who reportedly passed a resolution barring the use of Afghan soil for attacks abroad. According to Afghan broadcaster Tolo News, around 1,000 scholars attended the meeting and endorsed measures allowing the government to act against violators.

Pakistan and Afghanistan have struggled to maintain a fragile truce after border clashes killed dozens in October, their worst fighting since the Afghan Taliban took control of Kabul in 2021. Islamabad has blamed a surge in violence in Pakistan on militants who use Afghan soil to plan their attacks on security forces across the border. Kabul denies the charges, saying Pakistan’s security is an internal problem.

Kabul and Islamabad, once longtime allies, have engaged in intermittent border skirmishes since October, including heavy firing on Friday that killed at least five people. Three rounds of peace talks hosted by Qatar, Turkiye and Saudi Arabia have failed to produce a lasting agreement.

“Officials, leaders, and leadership of the Islamic system have pledged that the territory of Afghanistan will not be used to harm anyone,” Muttaqi said in a speech on Thursday. 

“All scholars and hadith experts also agree that obeying this command is obligatory for all Muslims, and if anyone uses Afghan soil to harm others, the Islamic Emirate has the right to stop them.”

He said the Afghan leadership had not authorized any individual or group to carry out military operations in other countries and the Islamic Emirate was entitled to take action against anyone who violated that directive.

Muttaqi also urged unity within the Muslim world, saying scholars had repeatedly advised against internal hostility. 

“Muslims must pay attention to unity and harmony among themselves, avoid hostility toward one another, and act with brotherhood and fraternity,” he said, calling adherence to scholars’ guidance a “shared duty.”

Pakistan on Thursday welcomed reports of the Afghan scholars’ resolution but said it still required formal, written assurances from Afghanistan’s leadership. 

Foreign Office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi told reporters on Thursday he had not seen the full text of the scholars’ resolution and that similar commitments had been made in the past but were not honored.

“Any developments with regards to the fact that Afghan leadership, the segment of Afghan society, realized the gravity of the situation that their soil is being used by not just TTP, but also by their own nationals to perpetrate terrorism in Pakistan, any realization to this effect is positive and one would certainly welcome it,” Andrabi said. 

However, he added that the resolution did not explicitly mention Pakistan or militant groups Islamabad has accused of launching cross-border attacks.

The shared mountainous border regions between Pakistan and Afghanistan are home to militants from the Tehreek-e-Taliban (TTP), also known as the Pakistani Taliban, who have waged a war against the Pakistani state for nearly 20 years.

The TTP adheres to a strict interpretation of Islamic law akin to their counterparts in Kabul, although the Afghan Taliban maintains that they do not share an operational relationship with the group.