
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping attend a family photo ceremony prior to the BRICS Summit plenary session in Kazan, Russia.
| Photo Credit: Reuters
China will seek to demonstrate Global South solidarity at SCO; Xi-Modi meeting will be one key event on summit sidelines; Putin to stay for World War Two military parade in Beijing
BEIJING President Xi Jinping will gather more than 20 world leaders at a regional security forum in China next week in a powerful show of Global South solidarity in the age of Donald Trump while also helping sanctions-hit Russia pull off another diplomatic coup.

Aside from Russian President Vladimir Putin, leaders from Central Asia, the Middle East, South Asia and Southeast Asia have been invited to the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit, to be held in the northern port city of Tianjin from August 31 to September 1.
The summit will feature Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modiâs first visit to China in more than seven years as the two neighbours work on further defusing tensions roiled by deadly border clashes in 2020.
PM Modi last shared the same stage with Mr. Xi and Mr. Putin at last yearâs BRICS summit in Kazan, Russia, even as Western leaders turned their backs on the Russian leader amid the war in Ukraine. Russian embassy officials in New Delhi last week said Moscow hopes trilateral talks with China and India will take place soon.
âXi will want to use the summit as an opportunity to showcase what a post-American-led international order begins to look like and that all White House efforts since January to counter China, Iran, Russia, and now India have not had the intended effect,â said Eric Olander, editor-in-chief of The China-Global South Project, a research agency. âJust look at how much BRICS has rattled [U.S. President] Donald Trump, which is precisely what these groups are designed to do.â
This yearâs summit will be the largest since the SCO was founded in 2001, a Chinese Foreign Ministry official said last week, calling the bloc an âimportant force in building a new type of international relationsâ.

The security-focused bloc, which began as a group of six Eurasian nations, has expanded to 10 permanent members and 16 dialogue and observer countries in recent years. Its remit has also enlarged from security and counter-terrorism to economic and military cooperation.
âFuzzyâ implementation
Analysts say expansion is high on the agenda for many countries attending, but agree the bloc has not delivered substantial cooperation outcomes over the years and that China values the optics of Global South solidarity against the United States at a time of erratic policymaking and geopolitical flux.
âWhat is the precise vision that the SCO represents and its practical implementation are rather fuzzy. It is a platform that has increasing convening power, which helps in narrative projection,â said Manoj Kewalramani, chairperson of the Indo-Pacific Research Programme at the Takshashila Institution thinktank in Bangalore.

âBut the SCOâs effectiveness in addressing substantial security issues remains very limited.â Frictions remain between core members India and Pakistan. The June SCO defence ministersâ meeting was unable to adopt a joint statement after India raised objections, saying it omitted reference to the deadly April 22 attack on Hindu tourists in Indian Kashmir which led to the worst fighting in decades between India and Pakistan.
New Delhi also refused to join the SCOâs condemnation of Israeli attacks on Iran, a member state, earlier in June. But the recent detente between India and China after five years of heightened border frictions, as well as renewed tariff pressure on New Delhi from the Trump administration, are driving expectations for a positive meeting between Mr. Xi and PM Modi on the sidelines of the summit.
âItâs likely [New Delhi] will swallow their pride and put this yearâs SCO problems behind them in a bid to maintain momentum in the dĂ©tente with China, which is a key Modi priority right now,â said Mr. Olander.
Analysts expect India and China to announce further incremental border measures such as troop withdrawals, the easing of trade and visa restrictions, cooperation in new fields including climate, and broader government and people-to-people engagement.
Despite the lack of substantive policy announcements expected at the summit, experts warn that the blocâs appeal to Global South countries should not be underestimated.
âThis summit is about optics, really powerful optics,â added Mr. Olander.
PM Modi is expected to depart from China after the summit, while Mr. Putin will stay on for a World War Two military parade in Beijing later in the week for an unusually long spell outside of Russia.
Published â August 26, 2025 03:27 pm IST