The Turkish president will travel to the meeting after Ankara reportedly applied for membership in the economic bloc
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has accepted the Kremlin’s invitation to attend the BRICS summit in the Russian city of Kazan next month, Russian presidential aide Yury Ushakov said on Tuesday.
“The proposal was conveyed to the Turkish side, [and] Erdogan accepted it,” Ushakov told Russia’s Interfax news agency.
The statement comes after Bloomberg reported on Monday that Türkiye had applied for BRICS membership. According to the outlet, Ankara submitted an application to join the economic bloc “some months ago,” partially driven by “rifts” between Türkiye and the rest of NATO over the Ukraine conflict.
If the report is true, Türkiye would be the first NATO state to seek membership of the non-Western BRICS group. Back in June, Turkish Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan stated that Ankara intended to join the bloc, before discussing the matter with Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow.
Read more
Since the term was first coined in 2001, BRICS has grown from an acronym into an informal alliance that has overtaken the US-led G7 bloc in its share of global GDP, has its own development bank, and has expanded from four members – Brazil, Russia, India, and China – to nine, including South Africa, Iran, and the United Arab Emirates.
Erdogan has attended BRICS summits before, but never as a prospective member of the bloc. Earlier this year, anonymous Turkish officials told Middle East Eye that tensions with the European Union had forced Ankara to look elsewhere for new economic partners.