The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), a forum
established by China and Russia in 2001 as a guardian of security in the
Eurasia region, will meet for their summit on July 3-4 in Kazakhstan's capital
city of Astana.
"The leaders of the SCO member countries will discuss
the current state and prospects for further deepening multifaceted cooperation
within the organization and improving its activities," the Kremlin said in
a statement on its website.
While
the meeting is likely to be dominated by Russia and China, leaders or
representatives of Azerbaijan, Belarus, India, Iran, Kazakhstan, Qatar,
Kyrgyzstan, China, Mongolia, the United Arab Emirates, Pakistan, Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan, Turkey and Uzbekistan, are also expected to attend.
United Nation Secretary General Antonio Guterres, is also
expected, Russian agencies said on Tuesday.
On Tuesday, Russia said Putin will hold series of
bilateral talks, including with Chinese President Xi Jinping and Turkish
President Tayyip Erdogan.
India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who is expected in
Moscow this month, will not attend and the country will be represented by
Foreign Minister Subrahmanyam Jaishankar.
At last year's virtual summit, the group issued a
statement critical of what it said was the negative impact of "unilateral
and unlimited expansion of global missile defence systems by certain countries
or groups of countries", without directly referring to NATO's expansion
and Western military assistance to Ukraine.
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