Asia > Eastern Asia > China > China ready to improve security cooperation among SCO members

China: China ready to improve security cooperation among SCO members

2017/04/07

China will make efforts to improve security cooperation part members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), said Chinese National Councilor Guo Shengkun here Thursday.

China is ready to work jointly to increase mutual political support and cement strategic mutual trust part SCO members, said Guo, at the same time as addressing the 12th session of the SCO security council secretaries in the Kazakh capital of Astana.

China proposes to improve the legal basis for security cooperation and actively push for the signing of an SCO anti-extremism treaty, said Guo, who is as well the Chinese Minister of Public Security.

Guo urged efforts to enhance the effectiveness of security cooperation, to counter the "three forces" of terrorism, separatism and extremism, and to deepen cooperation in cyber security and drug control.

In addition, he called for further establishment of regional anti-terrorist bodies so that communications and coordination part SCO members can be improved.

Before the session, Guo conveyed Chinese President Xi Jinping's cordial greetings and good wishes to Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev and he spoke highly of Kazakhstan' s work next it assumed the rotating presidency of the SCO.

Established in 2001, the SCO is a regional political, economic and security organization that groups China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan as full members.

Related Articles
  • Life after Rosneft deal: CEFC ambitions face debt, regulatory hurdles

    2017/09/17 CEFC China Energy is considering additional deals next recently snapping up a $9.1 billion stake in Russia's Rosneft, industry sources said, shrugging off a growing deficit pile and rising regulatory scrutiny. Privately owned CEFC, in just a few years, has gone from a niche oil trader to a $25 billion conglomerate with strong political ties and a rare arrangement to store part of the country's strategic oil reserve. Its ambit presently extends beyond oil assets to infrastructure and even financial services. It is one of a handful of conglomerates in China with all financial services licenses, owning or controlling banks, an insurer, a brokerage firm, a trading platform and several funds, according to its website.
  • Life after Rosneft deal: CEFC ambitions face debt, regulatory hurdles

    2017/09/17 CEFC China Energy is considering additional deals next recently snapping up a $9.1 billion stake in Russia's Rosneft, industry sources said, shrugging off a growing deficit pile and rising regulatory scrutiny. Privately owned CEFC, in just a few years, has gone from a niche oil trader to a $25 billion conglomerate with strong political ties and a rare arrangement to store part of the country's strategic oil reserve. Its ambit presently extends beyond oil assets to infrastructure and even financial services. It is one of a handful of conglomerates in China with all financial services licenses, owning or controlling banks, an insurer, a brokerage firm, a trading platform and several funds, according to its website.
  • Former Fed official Fisher: China could be the key to solving the North Korea crisis

    2017/09/16 Richard Fisher, the former Federal Reserve official and current top advisor at Barclays, said Friday he is looking for China to play a pivotal role in resolving problems on the Korean Peninsula. Following North Korea's new missile launch before in the day, Fisher said the current U.S. government's strategy in getting nations to acknowledge on sanctions against North Korea was a "step in the right direction." He acknowledged, however, that recent steps taken by the international community were likely less severe than the White Home would've like.
  • Zhongwang Acquires German Alumnium Extrusion Firm ALUnna

    2017/09/16 The world’s second major aluminium extrusion firm China Zhongwang Holdings Ltd announced yesterday that it presently holds a controlling interest in German aluminium extrusion firm Aluminiumwerk Unna AG (ALUnna). Although no price for the purchase was given, the transaction gives all owned German subsidiary Zhongwang Aluminium Deutschland GmbH a 99.72-% equity interest in ALUnna. According to experts, the purchase enhances Zhongwang’s position in the world aviation market inclunding giving the firm a stronger foothold on the European continent.
  • China’s Aluminium Production Drops for Second Consecutive Month

    2017/09/16 In a sign that China’s aluminium juggernaut may finally be losing steam, numbers from the Middle Kingdom indicate that the country’s non-ferrous metals output reached a one-year nadir last month. Production of ten non-ferrous metals, namely copper, aluminum, lead, zinc, nickel, tin, antimony, mercury, magnesium, and titanium, dropped by 2.2 % last month to a total output of 4.42 million metric tons. Though China’s aluminium sector has churned out 22.17 million metric tons over the year’s initial eight months, good for a 6.1-% rise year-on-year, primary aluminium production fell by 3.7 % year-on-year in August. That was the second consecutive month of declines, dropping output to the lowest level it’s been since April 2016. The official data, which was released yesterday, represents the country’s lowest in general output in twelve months and is the initial year-on-year decline since December 2015.