Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO)

Syllabus: Important International institutions, agencies and fora — their structure, mandate.

About SCO

  • SCO is a major Eurasian political, economic, and security organisation formed in 2001.
  • It covers 60% of Eurasia, 40% of global population, and 20% of global GDP.
  • Aims to strengthen cooperation in politics, security, economics, and culture.
  • Has a permanent secretariat in Beijing and affiliated bodies like RATS and the SCO Business Council.

Historical Evolution

  • Originated from the Shanghai Five (1996): China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan.
  • Uzbekistan joined in 2001, forming SCO on 15 June 2001.
  • India and Pakistan became members in 2017; Iran joined in 2023.
  • Governed by the Heads of State Council (HSC) meeting annually.

Membership

  • Currently 9 members: China, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Pakistan, Russia, Tajikistan, Uzbekistan.

Significance for India

  • Security Cooperation
    • Focus on terrorism, separatism, extremism, and cross-border crimes.
    • Works through RATS and coordination with CSTO.
    • Addresses cyber threats and harmful information flows.
  • Military Cooperation
    • Conducts joint military exercises and intelligence sharing.
    • Enhances counter-terror capacity and regional stability.
  • Economic Cooperation
    • Promotes energy projects, water resource management, and joint investments via SCO Interbank Consortium.
    • Supports food and energy security initiatives.
  • Cultural Cooperation
    • Regular meetings of culture ministers.
    • Organises art festivals and exhibitions to enhance cultural exchange.

Key Challenges for SCO

  • Conflicts Among Members
    • India–China border tensions remain unresolved.
    • India–Pakistan face terrorism-related conflicts and ceasefire violations.
    • Kyrgyzstan–Tajikistan territorial disputes persist.
    • Afghanistan–Pakistan border instability affects regional security.
  • Power imbalance dominated by China and Russia.
  • Limited economic integration and uneven development.
  • Influence of external geopolitical powers complicates unity.
  • Divergence in political systems and human rights commitments.
  • Difficulty in coordinating anti-terror efforts due to differing priorities.

Conclusion

  • SCO offers India significant strategic and economic opportunities in Eurasia.
  • However, internal disputes, geopolitical rivalries, and weak institutional mechanisms continue to challenge its effectiveness.

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