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Updated May 15, 2026 · 01:15
India News Updated May 15, 2026

China Ready to Support India's BRICS Chairmanship: Envoy

Chinese Ambassador to India, Fu Xeihong, attended the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi on behalf of China, expressing support for India's chairmanship. Prime Minister Narendra Modi met several foreign ministers including Sergey Lavrov and Abbas Araghchi. External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar convened the meeting, noting BRICS as a stabilising force amid global challenges. India assumed the BRICS Chairmanship on January 1, 2025, for the fourth time.

'Ready to support India...': Chinese Envoy attends BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meet

New Delhi, May 15

Chinese Ambassador to India, Fu Xeihong, attended the BRICS Foreign Minister's Meeting here in the national capital on behalf of Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi and underlined how China attaches great importance to the BRICS cooperation.

In a post on X, he noted how BRICS serves as an integral platform for cooperation among emerging markets and that China stands ready to support India in making the Meeting successful.

"BRICS is an important platform for cooperation among emerging markets and developing countries. China attaches great importance to BRICS cooperation. We stand ready to support India in making the FMM a full success, and advance the high-quality development of greater BRICS cooperation", the Chinese Ambassador said.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Thursday met several foreign ministers attending the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting in New Delhi, including Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi, South African Foreign Minister Ronald Lamola and Brazilian Foreign Minister Mauro Vieira.

The meetings took place on the sidelines of the BRICS Foreign Ministers' gathering being hosted in the Indian capital.

Prime Minister Modi also joined the visiting ministers and delegates for the official BRICS family photo, which brought together representatives of member countries and partner nations participating in the high-level diplomatic engagement.

Amidst the historic backdrop of New Delhi, the diplomatic pulse of the Global South quickened on Thursday as External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar convened the BRICS Foreign Ministers' Meeting.

He observed that the global system is currently buckling under the weight of armed conflicts, climate disruptions, and the lingering shadows of the pandemic. Within this context, he noted that emerging economies are increasingly viewing the BRICS bloc as an essential stabilising force.

India officially assumed the BRICS Chairmanship on January 1 this year, taking over from Brazil. This marks the fourth time India has held the presidency of the influential bloc, having previously hosted summits in 2012, 2016, and 2021.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

This shows India's growing diplomatic clout. China coming to New Delhi and pledging support is a big deal. But let's not forget they are also the ones creating problems in Ladakh. Jaishankar ji is handling things well though—balancing cooperation with firmness.

Michael C

Interesting move by China. They need BRICS now more than ever given their economic slowdown. India should leverage this position to push for reforms within the bloc and ensure it remains relevant for developing nations like us.

Vikram M

While I appreciate diplomatic channels staying open, China's consistent aggression at the border makes this hard to swallow. We should welcome cooperation but also keep our guard up. Trust but verify, as they say. PM Modi's leadership in this regard is commendable.

Sarah B

BRICS is indeed crucial for counterbalancing Western dominance in global affairs. Happy that India is chairing this year. But I hope the focus remains on tangible outcomes for the Global South—trade, climate finance, and tech transfer—rather than just photo ops.

Rohit P

China says "ready to support India" but their troops are still occupying Indian territory. No amount of diplomatic niceties can hide that reality. Still, it's smart of India to engage them multilaterally—keeps them more accountable than bilateral talks alone.

Kavya N

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Reader Voices

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