Azerbaijan’s envoy to Moscow comments on BRICS aspirations

19 Aug, 2024 09:22 / Updated 3 months ago
Baku is keen to join the economic and trading bloc, Ambassador Polad Bulbuloglu has said

Azerbaijan is interested in becoming a member of BRICS, and work is already underway in relation to its possible accession, Baku's Ambassador to Moscow Polad Bulbuloglu has said.

In an interview with TASS news agency on Sunday, Bulbuloglu said there is a long list of nations with a desire to join the economic bloc, and his country is among them.

“We talked about it with our Russian colleagues, but this is also a process and a matter of work,” Bulbuloglu told the agency, ahead of a visit to Baku by Russian President Vladimir Putin.

BRICS was founded in 2006 by Brazil, Russia, India, and China, with South Africa joining in 2011. Russia currently holds the BRICS chairmanship. The group decided to accept six more states during its summit in Johannesburg in August 2023. However, Argentina declined an invitation to join in late December. Meanwhile, Egypt, Ethiopia, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates became full members at the beginning of this year.

Russia assumed the rotating chairmanship of the BRICS bloc on January 1. More than 200 events are planned for the next year, including international forums, meetings of ministers, and gatherings of task groups. The Russian city of Kazan will host the next BRICS summit in October.

Putin arrived in Azerbaijan on Sunday for a two-day state visit. He is set to meet his Azerbaijani counterpart Ilham Aliyev to discuss the development of the strategic partnership and allied relations between the neighboring countries, as well as current international and regional issues.

Azerbaijan, a major gas producer to which many EU nations have turned to make up for the sharp reduction in Russian energy supplies following the Ukrainian conflict in February 2022, is a close partner of Moscow. EU officials recently suggested that the Caucasian nation could run its natural gas through a pipeline that currently brings Russian fuel to the bloc via Ukraine. The scheme is expected to help Brussels to avoid shortages after a transit deal between Kiev and Moscow expires at the end of this year.

In July, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Aleksandr Novak said Moscow was ready to continue supplies, but stressed that the future of transit fully depends on Kiev.