HEADLINES

Malaysia among nine countries to officially join as BRICS partner on Jan 1, 2025

Belarus, Bolivia, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Cuba, Uganda, and Uzbekistan also confirmed their readiness, says Kremlin aide

10:44 AM MYT

 

KUALA LUMPUR – Malaysia is set to officially join BRICS as a partner on January 1, 2025, along with eight other countries: Belarus, Bolivia, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Thailand, Cuba, Uganda, and Uzbekistan. 

The announcement was made by Kremlin aide Yury Ushakov during a briefing yesterday, as reported by Sputnik.

“On the eve of the summit in Kazan, we received 35 applications to join BRICS in one condition or another,” he said.

“Undoubtedly, one of the most important results of the summit was the establishment of the category of BRICS partner countries and agreement on a list of 13 countries. Proposals were sent to these countries.

“To date, Belarus, Bolivia, Indonesia, Kazakhstan, Kazakhstan, Cuba, Malaysia, Thailand, Uganda, Malaysia, Uganda and Uzbekistan have confirmed their readiness to become BRICS partner states,” Ushakov told a briefing, adding that these countries will officially become BRICS partners from January 1, 2025.

The aide added that Russia is expected to receive responses in the near future from four other countries to which invitations have also been sent.

More than 20 countries have shown interest in BRICS and the doors of the association remain open for the entry of like-minded people, Ushakov added. – December 24, 2024

Topics

 

Popular

Petronas staff to be shown the door to make up losses from Petros deal?

Source claims national O&G firm is expected to see 30% revenue loss once agreed formula for natural gas distribution in Sarawak is implemented

Duck and cover? FashionValet bought Vivy’s 30 Maple for RM95 mil in 2018

Purchase of Duck's holding company which appears to be owned wholly by Datin Vivy Yusof and husband Datuk Fadzarudin Shah Anuar was made same year GLICs invested RM47 mil

InDrive faces termination for flouting guidelines

It is the second Russian e-hailing app after Maxim to face ban by Land Public Transport Agency

Related