S Jaishankar, Minister of External Affairs, met with SCO Secretary-General Zhang Ming on Thursday to talk about the group's overall agenda. The gathering occurred uninvolved of the Shanghai Participation Association (SCO) Board of Unfamiliar Priests (CFM) in this ocean-side retreat.
India will host the gathering prior to its annual conclusion in July. "A productive conversation with Secretary General Zhang Ming kicked off my meetings at SCO CFM." Jaishankar tweeted, "Appreciate his support for India's SCO Presidency."
A commitment to SECURE SCO is the driving force behind the Indian presidency. It focuses primarily on new businesses, traditional medicine, youth development, Buddhism, and science and innovation.
"Looking forward to a successful CFM in Goa," he said. The unfamiliar priests will discuss the region's overall problems at the gathering in light of the current geopolitical tension, and the status of separate ties between different nations will not affect the discussions.
The SCO is one of the largest trans-regional international organizations and a powerful economic and security bloc.
At its highest point in Shanghai in 2001, the leaders of Russia, China, the Kyrgyz Republic, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan laid out the SCO.
In 2017, India and Pakistan became super-durable individuals. India joined the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) as an observer member in 2005. Since then, it has typically been distributed to pastoral-level gatherings of the group, which primarily focus on financial and security participation in the Eurasian region.
India has stated that it would like to collaborate more closely with the Regional Anti-Terrorism Structure (RATS) of the Security Cooperation Organization (SCO), which focuses on defense and security issues.