logo
BRICS leaders adopt declaration at 17th summit

BRICS leaders adopt declaration at 17th summit

IOL Newsa day ago
A plenary session of the BRICS summit on the theme of 'Peace and Security and Reform of Global Governance' was held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
A plenary session of the BRICS summit on the theme of "Peace and Security and Reform of Global Governance" was held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. At the end of the meeting, the participants adopted the final declaration.
The meeting was opened by Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. In his speech, he recalled that this was the fourth time the country had hosted the summit.
"If global governance does not correspond to the new multipolar reality of the 21st century, then the task of BRICS is to promote its renewal. The representativeness and diversity of the association make it a force that promotes peace [...]. We can lay the foundation for a renewed system of global governance," said Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, President of Brazil
Russian President Vladimir Putin addressed the summit via videoconference. He emphasised that BRICS' authority and influence in the world is growing year by year.
"Our group has expanded significantly and includes leading countries in Eurasia, Africa, the Middle East, and Latin America. Together, we have truly enormous political, economic, scientific, technological, and human potential"
The Russian leader stated the need to expand the use of national currencies in mutual settlements. According to him, the creation of an independent settlement and depository system within BRICS will make currency transactions faster, more efficient and safer. This is also reflected in the final declaration.
"We welcome the BRICS Interbank Cooperation Mechanism (ICM) focus on facilitating and expanding innovative financial practices and approaches for projects and programmes, including finding acceptable mechanisms of financing in local currencies," the document says.
Putin also noted the importance of Brazil continuing to work on the implementation of Russian initiatives proposed in 2024, including the BRICS Grain Exchange, a climate research centre, a permanent logistics platform and sports cooperation programmes. He expressed confidence that the final declaration of the BRICS summit would create a good basis for further joint activities in the spirit of equal cooperation.
In the document, the leaders called for reform of the UN Security Council. Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi also stated the need for this in his speech at the plenary session.
"The expansion of BRICS and the accession of new partners to the group is proof that this is an association capable of changing over time. Now we need to show the same determination in reforming other institutions, including the UN Security Council, the WTO and multilateral development banks," said Narendra Modi, Indian Prime Minister.
South African President Cyril Ramaphosa expressed a similar point of view. In addition, he noted that the expansion of BRICS opens up new opportunities for strengthening mutual trade, technological exchange and cooperation in the field of green economy.
Ramaphosa paid special attention to the fight against terrorism, emphasising that South Africa is committed to the full implementation of the BRICS strategy to counter terrorism. In the declaration, the leaders also condemned the terrorist attack in India on 22 April 2025, which killed 26 people, and called for the speedy finalisation and adoption by the UN of a comprehensive convention on combating international terrorism.
Egyptian Prime Minister Mostafa Madbouly announced the priority areas for cooperation among the ten countries: economic integration, energy, infrastructure and financial cooperation, including settlements in national currencies, strengthening the role of the New Development Bank of BRICS, and new technologies.
The latter point, namely the development of artificial intelligence (AI), received special attention in the final declaration."To support a constructive debate towards a more balanced approach, we agreed on the BRICS Leaders' Statement on the Global Governance of Artificial Intelligence, which aims to foster responsible development, deployment, and use of AI technologies for sustainable development and inclusive growth," the document emphasises.
In addition, the member countries recognised the importance of continuing work on the BRICS Grain Exchange initiative, agreed to establish the BRICS Space Council and expressed their support for India's Presidency of the group in 2026 and the hosting of the 18th BRICS summit.
This article was originally published in TV BRICS.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BRICS' criticism brings Trump 10% tariff threat
BRICS' criticism brings Trump 10% tariff threat

IOL News

timean hour ago

  • IOL News

BRICS' criticism brings Trump 10% tariff threat

General view during a plenary session of the BRICS summit in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, on July 7, 2025. BRICS leaders at a summit on Sunday took aim at US President Donald Trump's "indiscriminate" import tariffs and recent Israeli-US strikes on Iran. Image: Pablo PORCIUNCULA / AFP US President Donald Trump threatened China, India, and some of the world's fastest-emerging economies with higher import tariffs, hitting back at BRICS' criticism of his trade policies as the bloc meets Monday. The 11-nation grouping - which also includes US allies Brazil, Saudi Arabia, and Indonesia - is concluding a two-day summit in Rio de Janeiro. On Sunday, BRICS leaders described Trump's stop-start tariff wars as "indiscriminate", damaging, and illegal, drawing a quick rebuke from the pugilistic US president. "Any Country aligning themselves with the Anti-American policies of BRICS, will be charged an ADDITIONAL 10% Tariff. There will be no exceptions to this policy," Trump wrote on social media. BRICS members account for about half the world's population and 40% of global economic output. Conceived two decades ago as a forum for fast-growing economies, the BRICS have come to be seen as a Chinese-driven counterbalance to US influence. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Next Stay Close ✕ But it is an expanding and often divergent grouping - bringing together arch US foes like Iran and Russia, with some of Washington's closest allies in Latin America, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. Some US allies inside the bloc had tried to blunt criticism by not mentioning Trump by name in their summit statement. Saudi Arabia - one of the world's biggest purchasers of US high-tech weapons - even kept its foreign minister away from Sunday's talks and a BRICS "family photo" of leaders, seemingly to avoid Washington's ire. But such diplomatic gestures were lost on the US president. In April, Trump threatened a slew of punitive duties, before backing off in the face of a fierce market sell-off. Now he is threatening to impose unilateral levies on trading partners unless they reach "deals" by August 1, with BRICS nations seemingly getting higher tariffs than planned. It cannot have helped that BRICS leaders also condemned the recent US and Israeli bombing of Iran's nuclear facilities - a show of solidarity with fellow member Iran. Beijing on Monday insisted BRICS was not seeking confrontation with the United States. "China has repeatedly stated its position that trade and tariff wars have no winners and protectionism offers no way forward," foreign ministry spokesperson Mao Ning said. Beijing also defended the bloc as "an important platform for cooperation between emerging markets and developing countries". "It advocates openness, inclusivity, and win-win cooperation," Mao said. "It does not engage in camp confrontation and is not targeted at any country," she said. The political punch of this year's summit has been depleted by the absence of China's Xi Jinping, who skipped the meeting for the first time in his 12 years as president.

Rand, other emerging currencies recover from shock of Trump's tariff hike announcement
Rand, other emerging currencies recover from shock of Trump's tariff hike announcement

Eyewitness News

timean hour ago

  • Eyewitness News

Rand, other emerging currencies recover from shock of Trump's tariff hike announcement

JOHANNESBURG - Some emerging currencies have recovered from the shock of tariff hikes by United States (US) President Donald Trump. Trump has issued letters to more than a dozen countries, including South Africa, putting them on notice for an increase in import duties on goods bound for the US. South Africa has been slapped with a 30% levy at the start of August. At its weakest on Tuesday, the rand traded at R17.86 against the dollar. It has since recovered slightly to R17.77 to the dollar. The risk-sensitive rand had already battled at the start of the week when Trump threatened additional 10% tariffs for countries aligned with the BRICS bloc. Trump described BRICS allies as having an anti-American agenda. Despite the concerns about the impact on exports, especially for the agricultural industry, there is some optimism that South Africa can still negotiate favourable terms of trade with the US before the new tariffs take effect in three weeks' time. At the current rate, the rand is almost 10% stronger than it was in April when it traded at 19.74 to the dollar when Trump first announced the 'Liberation Day' tariffs. ALSO READ: Ramaphosa maintains US 30% tariff hike inaccurate representation of trade between US and SA

The latest Trump tariffs on SA smell of a bigger BRICS battle
The latest Trump tariffs on SA smell of a bigger BRICS battle

Daily Maverick

timean hour ago

  • Daily Maverick

The latest Trump tariffs on SA smell of a bigger BRICS battle

Stop me if you've heard this before, but Trump just sent out letters to global leaders talking about the incoming reciprocal tariffs. This time the deadline is 1 August. Cue the market panic. A late-night WhatsApp response from a sales director in the local wine industry read simply: ' he's a [ expletive ] idiot ' – after being asked for comment on Donald Trump's latest trade letter to South Africa (SA) published on Truth Social. That single sentence might just capture the collective sigh echoing across boardrooms, vineyards and orchards from Constantia to Killarney. On Monday, 7 July, President Donald Trump signed an order imposing a 30% tariff on all South African exports to the US, effective from 1 August. It's a hammer blow – not just to South African oranges, macadamias and wine, but against an entire trade philosophy. Reciprocity or retribution? This is a vintage Trump play: loud, unilateral and unashamedly nationalist. The US President frames it as a patriotic correction of 'decades of bad trade deals', claiming that persistent trade deficits are not just bad economics, but existential threats to US sovereignty. Answering press questions, Trump returned to his well of confusion and obfuscation: 'They're going to be tariffs. Tariffs are going to be the tariffs… But they go into effect on August 1st.' His spokesperson, Karoline Leavitt, offered her own, unique take during a Monday press conference, describing the President's approach as if he were plotting a new season of The Apprentice: 'He's looking at every country on the planet, seeing where they are ripping off the American people… and he's correcting that.' BRICS bites back Meanwhile, the newly expanded BRICS bloc (now including Indonesia and a growing cohort of partners) has fired back in diplomatic parlance. In their Rio de Janeiro declaration, they condemned 'unilateral coercive measures' as distortive and inconsistent with WTO rules, reaffirming a vision of a multilateral, fairer global trade order. Trump's reaction? You guessed it: even more tariffs. Threatening an additional 10% penalty on countries 'aligning with BRICS anti-American policies' and adding fuel to an already roaring geopolitical braai fire. Pork disease and power plays Our micro-sectors have been fighting this battle for a long time. The South African pork industry, for example, is resisting US demands to drop biosecurity protocols against Porcine Reproductive and Respiratory Syndrome (PRRS), a disease that SA has, so far, kept at bay. Dr Peter Evans from the South African Pork Producers' Organisation warns that relaxing these standards could be catastrophic: 'We're just trying to keep our industry disease-free. Every time Agoa comes around, we have the same fight.' Evans is referring to the 2015 standoff over pork imports, when US officials insisted that SA's PRRS-driven pork restrictions amounted to protectionism, while Pretoria's veterinary authorities stood firm that safeguarding the nation's disease-free status was non-negotiable. That controversy escalated and became entangled with other agricultural disputes – most notably the long-standing tensions over US poultry and beef exports – with SA's Agoa eligibility hanging in the balance until a last-minute compromise paved the way for continued market access. Local jobs in firing line The economic tremors of the latest earthquake are already being felt. Sonja Boshoff, chair of Parliament's select committee on economic development and trade, was direct in a media statement shared with Daily Maverick: 'These industries are not abstract economic indicators; they are lifelines for tens of thousands of workers.' As previously reported, the citrus industry alone supports more than 35,000 jobs and contributes more than R38-billion to the economy annually. Boshoff warned that sudden tariff hikes sabotage decades of careful trade diplomacy, undermine confidence in agreements like Agoa, and threaten entire rural economies. 'No country can plan its industrial or export strategy under a cloud of sudden and unilateral tariff hikes.' In political corridors, there's talk of offering strategic Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) procurement to the US as a bargaining chip. Boshoff, however, insists on swift, transparent negotiations. 'We cannot afford diplomatic dithering,' she said. What this means for you Jobs on the line: The citrus, steel and agricultural sectors face immediate existential risks. Exporters may pass costs onto local prices, hurting consumers too. A shrinking US doorway: Agoa's benefits are now largely neutralised, and producers relying on the US market must urgently diversify. AfCFTA as a safety valve: Local businesses can start exploring new African markets, but this demands investment, strategy and robust digital defences against fraud. Policy crossroads: Government support, logistics aid and fast-tracked trade deals with the EU and Asia will be vital to plug revenue holes. The continental plan B While the US door starts to close, some industry players are eyeing the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA) as a lifeline. Gregory Saffy of FedEx calls it 'one of the most important levers for driving inclusive growth and unlocking the continent's full trade potential'. South African exports under AfCFTA have already reached around R820-million since January 2024, including mining equipment, plastics, apparel and food products. Yet for small and medium businesses, the reality is more nuanced. Saffy points out that eliminating tariffs doesn't magically create customers: 'A free trade agreement doesn't create demand for a business's products.' SMEs need to be export-ready, secure payment systems, and understand new markets; no small feat in a continent where paperwork and payment fraud are still major obstacles. He advocates digitising customs systems, building transparent tariff schedules, and boosting SME readiness through targeted training and support. The ultimate prize? A less US-dependent, more intra-African trade future that could blunt the force of global protectionism. SA is caught between an increasingly hostile US and a collaborative but still-evolving BRICS vision. As Trump pushes his 'America first' agenda to new extremes, local producers are being forced to confront a reality where no market is guaranteed. DM

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store