His remarks at a two-day meeting in New Delhi underscore
divisions within the expanded BRICS bloc, as the US-Israeli war on Iran casts a
shadow over the gathering of foreign ministers.
Araghchi criticized Washington, describing the war as
"illegal expansionism and warmongering," and said Iran remained open
to diplomacy while being ready to defend itself "with all available means."
"Iran
therefore calls upon BRICS member states and all responsible members of the
international community to explicitly condemn violations of international law
by the United States and Israel," he said.
The conflict, which began on February 28, has heightened
geopolitical tensions and sparked a global energy crisis.
In his
opening remarks, Indian Foreign Minister S. Jaishankar struck a cautious tone,
avoiding direct criticism while stressing the importance of stability.
"The conflict in West Asia merits particular
attention," Jaishankar said, without naming specific countries.
He said unimpeded maritime flows through international
waterways, including the Strait of Hormuz and
the Red Sea, were vital for global economic well-being.
He also flagged concerns over the growing use of unilateral
sanctions, a longstanding point of contention among BRICS members.
"There is an increasing resort to unilateral coercive measures and sanctions
inconsistent with international law and the UN Charter," he said.
"Such measures disproportionately affect developing countries. These
unjustifiable measures cannot substitute dialogue, nor can pressure replace
diplomacy."
Jaishankar added that emerging economies expect BRICS to
play a "constructive and stabilizing role" at a time of rising
geopolitical fragmentation and economic uncertainty.
The
grouping, originally comprising Brazil, Russia, India and China, was expanded
to include South Africa in 2011, and more recently admitted Egypt, Ethiopia,
Indonesia, Iran and the United Arab Emirates (UAE).
The expansion has boosted its global weight but also
increased internal divergences on geopolitical issues. India holds the BRICS
chair for 2026.
Iran's stance could make it difficult for BRICS — which
operates by consensus — to agree on a joint statement, given the UAE’s presence
on the opposing side.
Iran has launched numerous attacks on the UAE and other
neighboring countries.
The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz — a critical
artery that handles
roughly a fifth of global oil shipments — has triggered one of the biggest
supply disruptions in recent history.
The curbs on tanker traffic have pushed crude prices sharply
higher, fuelling fears of renewed inflation, tighter financial conditions and a
potential global economic slowdown, particularly for energy-importing economies
such as India.
Separately, India's foreign ministry said on Thursday that
an Indian-flagged ship was attacked off the coast of Oman on Wednesday and all
crew on board were safe.
"The attack
... is unacceptable and we deplore the fact that commercial shipping and
civilian mariners continue to be targeted."
However, two LPG tankers announcing India as their
destination have crossed the Strait of Hormuz between Wednesday and Thursday,
ship tracking data indicates.
The Marshall Islands-flagged Symi and Vietnam-flagged NV
Sunshine are the first India-bound energy tankers to transit the fraught waters
of the Strait of Hormuz in nearly two weeks. Both the LPG tankers have stated
Gujarat’s Kandla port as their intended destination.
So far, 10 India-flagged vessels—nine LPG tankers and one
crude oil tanker—have crossed the Strait of Hormuz since early March.

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