Special report: SCO Summit 2006
SHANGHAI, June 13 (Xinhua) -- Founded on the tenet of defending regional peace and stability, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) has embarked on a long-term campaign against the "three evil forces" and is poised to continue efforts to promote security cooperation.
At the Thursday summit which marks the fifth
anniversary of the SCO's establishment, presidents of the six SCO member states
are expected to sign important documents on the promotion of the partnership in
security, said SCO Secretary-General Zhang Deguang at a news conference in
Beijing ahead of the summit.
In April, the defense ministers of the SCO countries
announced plans for an anti-terrorist exercise in Russia next year, which would
be the largest-ever joint military exercise compared with the previous three.
The regional group, which consists of China,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, originated and grew
from the Shanghai Five mechanism, which was founded in 1996 by China, Russia,
Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan with the aim of strengthening
confidence-building, carrying out cuts in armed forces in their border areas and
promoting regional cooperation.
On the day when the SCO was founded, the six heads of
state signed the Shanghai Pact on fighting terrorism, separatism and extremism.
The SCO is one of the earliest international organizations that hold the
anti-terror banner.
A regional anti-terror agency was launched in
Tashkent, capital of Uzbekistan, during the 2004 SCO summit to coordinate SCO
members' efforts in fighting the "three evil forces" -- terrorism, separatism
and extremism.
In line with the agreement on strengthening mutual
trust, China has, through equal consultation, settled historical disputes with
Russia and its central Asian neighbors along the common borders stretching at
least 7,000 km.
In recent years, the SCO has done a lot of
substantial work in defense and security area.
Within the SCO framework, China and Russia held their
first joint military exercises, code-named "Peace Mission 2005" last August.
The one-week maneuvers, which involved 10,000 troops
from the two countries, started in Vladivostok in Russia's Far East and later
moved to China's Shandong Peninsula.
In addition to enhancing trust and friendship between
the two countries, the drills also demonstrated the determination and confidence
of both armies to counter new challenges and threats in the new situations.
Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov has said SCO
military exercises are "very necessary" in view of the fact that international
terrorist activities are on the rise and terrorist are equipped with more modern
types of weapons.
Meanwhile, the SCO members are trying to boost
cooperation in information exchange and judicial assistance.
Battling the "three evil forces" on the one hand, the
SCO also has to focus on cracking down on drug trafficking as well as related
crimes such as money laundering and weapons smuggling on the other.
Since Afghanistan shares common borders with a few
Central Asian countries, the region has become a crucial transit route for drug
smugglers traveling from Afghanistan to Europe and other parts of the world.
To tackle the issue of common concern, the SCO set up
a liaison group in November 2005 between the SCO and Afghanistan and promised to
actively take part in establishing an "anti-drug zone" around Afghanistan and in
its economic reconstruction.
As a guest of the host country, Afghan President
Hamid Karzai will attend the Shanghai summit on Thursday.
Though the SCO is trying to flex its muscles in the
security field, Chinese Foreign Minister Li Zhaoxing has stressed that the SCO
"does not target any third party."
"The SCO organization will not turn into a new
military-political alliance," said Russian Defense Minister Ivanov during his
latest trip to Beijing, where he attended an SCO meeting on par with his SCO
counterparts. Enditem