HomeBussinessBRICS offered Turkey partner country status, Turkish trade minister says

BRICS offered Turkey partner country status, Turkish trade minister says

Date:

Related stories

NFL Thanksgiving 2024 schedule: Where to watch this year’s football game

Thanksgiving and NFL football has been a beloved tradition...

Turkish strike drone completes first carrier landing, takeoff

ISTANBUL — The Baykar TB-3 combat drone landed and...

Baltimore’s Classic Five Golf Courses To Host Annual ‘Turkey Shoot’ Golf Outings – PressBox

Baltimore Municipal Golf Corporation (BMGC), also known as Baltimore’s...

Osimhen praised for explosive impact on Turkish football

Victor Osimhen’s remarkable impact on Turkish Super Lig side...
spot_imgspot_img

ANKARA (Reuters) – Turkey was offered partner country status by the BRICS group of nations, Trade Minister Omer Bolat said, as Ankara continues what it calls its efforts to balance its Eastern and Western ties.

Turkey, a NATO member, has in recent months voiced interest in joining the BRICS group of emerging economies, comprising Brazil, Russia, India, China, South Africa, Ethiopia, Iran, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan attended a BRICS leaders’ summit hosted by Russian President Vladimir Putin in Kazan last month, after Ankara said it had taken formal steps to become a member of the group.

“As for Turkey’s status regarding (BRICS) membership, they offered Turkey the status of partner membership,” Bolat said in an interview with private broadcaster TVNet on Wednesday.

“This (status) is the transition process in the organisational structure of BRICS,” he said.

Ankara sees the BRICS group as an opportunity to further economic cooperation with member states, rather than an alternative to its Western ties and NATO membership, Erdogan has said.

Turkish officials have repeatedly said potential membership of BRICS would not affect Turkey’s responsibilities to the Western military alliance.

Aside from full membership, BRICS members introduced a “partner country” category in Kazan, according to the declaration issued by BRICS on Oct. 23.

Bolat did not say whether Ankara had accepted the proposal.

An official in Erdogan’s ruling AK Party told Reuters this month that while the proposal had been discussed in Kazan, partner country status would fall short of Turkey’s demands for membership.

(Additional reporting by Jonathan Spicer; Writing by Huseyin Hayatsever and Tuvan Gumrukcu; Editing by Neil Fullick)

- Never miss a story with notifications

- Gain full access to our premium content

- Browse free from up to 5 devices at once

Latest stories

spot_img