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Shanghai Cooperation Organisation

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

World leaders attending the 2018 Shanghai Cooperation Organization Summit, posing together in a formal setting.

The Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) is a Eurasian political, economic and international security group of ten countries. It works on political, economic, and security issues, and helps stop terrorism.

It is one of the largest regional organisation in the world. It covers a big part of the Earth's area and includes many people. Its work covers about 24% of the world's land and 42% of all people.

The SCO started from a group called the Shanghai Five, formed in 1996 by China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan. In 2001, these countries and Uzbekistan met in Shanghai to create the SCO. Later, India and Pakistan joined in 2017. Iran became a member in 2023, and Belarus joined in 2024. The SCO meets regularly, with its most recent meeting in September 2025 in Tianjin, China.

The SCO is led by the Heads of State Council (HSC), which meets once a year. The group also has the Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure (RATS).

Origins

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation started in 1996 as the Shanghai Five group. Leaders from China, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, and Tajikistan signed a treaty to build trust near their borders. Over the next few years, they signed more agreements to reduce military forces and support each other.

In 2001, the group met again in Shanghai and became the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Uzbekistan joined at this time. The organisation grew quickly, making new groups to work on economic and security issues. By 2003, it had official bodies like a Council of Heads of State and a Secretariat in Beijing. India and Pakistan became full members in 2017, and the SCO now works with many other international groups.

Organisational structure

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) has a clear way of making decisions. The top group is the Council of Heads of State. It is made up of leaders from each member country. They meet once a year in different capital cities to talk about important issues.

There are also other groups. These include the Council of Heads of Government and the Council of Foreign Ministers. They meet regularly to talk about working together and making plans. The main office, called the Secretariat, is in Beijing, China. It helps carry out decisions and share information about the SCO. Another important part is the Regional Anti-Terrorist Structure in Tashkent, Uzbekistan. It works on safety matters. The SCO uses Chinese and Russian as its official languages.

Directors of SCO RATS Executive Committee
Years in officeName
15 June 2004 – 2006Uzbekistan Vyacheslav Kasymov
2007–2009Kyrgyzstan Myrzakan Subanov
2010–2012Kazakhstan Dzhenisbek Dzhumanbekov
2013–2015China Zhang Xinfeng
2016–2018Russia Yevgeniy Sysoev
2019–2021Tajikistan Jumakhon Giyosov
2022–2024Uzbekistan Ruslan Mirzaev
2025–presentKyrgyzstan Ularbek Sharsheev
Heads of SCO Secretariat
Years in officeName
Executive Secretary
15 January 2004 – 2006China Zhang Deguang
Secretaries-General
2007–2009Kazakhstan Bolat Nurgaliyev
2010–2012Kyrgyzstan Muratbek Imanaliyev
2013–2015Russia Dmitry Mezentsev
2016–2018Tajikistan Rashid Alimov
2019–2021Uzbekistan Vladimir Norov
2022–2024China Zhang Ming
2025–presentKazakhstan Nurlan Yermekbayev

Membership

Main article: Member states of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) is a group of countries that work together on important issues. These countries meet often to talk about ways to help each other.

Some countries are not full members but still play roles, like observer states or dialogue partners. This lets them join meetings and share ideas. For example, Turkmenistan attends as a guest because it is a neutral country. Other countries, like Turkey, are interested in joining the SCO and are working toward becoming full members.

CountryAccession startedMember since
China15 June 2001
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyzstan
Russia
Tajikistan
Uzbekistan
India10 June 20159 June 2017
Pakistan
Iran17 September 20214 July 2023
Belarus16 September 20224 July 2024
CountryFormer statusDate of older statusDate of new status
MongoliaObserver20041 September 2025
Sri LankaDialogue Partner6 May 20101 September 2025
AfghanistanObserver7 June 20121 September 2025
TurkeyDialogue Partner26 April 20131 September 2025
CambodiaDialogue Partner24 September 20151 September 2025
AzerbaijanDialogue Partner14 March 20161 September 2025
  NepalDialogue Partner22 March 20161 September 2025
ArmeniaDialogue Partner16 April 20161 September 2025
EgyptDialogue Partner14 September 20221 September 2025
QatarDialogue Partner14 September 20221 September 2025
Saudi ArabiaDialogue Partner14 September 20221 September 2025
KuwaitDialogue Partner5 May 20231 September 2025
MaldivesDialogue Partner5 May 20231 September 2025
MyanmarDialogue Partner5 May 20231 September 2025
United Arab EmiratesDialogue Partner5 May 20231 September 2025
BahrainDialogue Partner15 July 20231 September 2025
LaosDialogue Partner1 September 20251 September 2025
CountryStatus granted
Mongolia2004
Afghanistan7 June 2012 (inactive September 2021–1 September 2025)
Former observers
India5 July 2005
Pakistan
Iran
Belarus2015
CountryStatus approvedStatus granted
Sri Lanka15 or 16 June 20096 May 2010
Turkey7 June 201226 April 2013
Cambodia10 July 201524 September 2015
Azerbaijan14 March 2016
  Nepal22 March 2016
Armenia16 April 2016
Egypt16 September 202114 September 2022
Qatar
Saudi Arabia
Kuwait16 September 20225 May 2023
Maldives
Myanmar
United Arab Emirates
Bahrain15 July 2023
Laos1 September 2025
Former dialogue partners
Belarus15 or 16 June 200928 April 2010
Country guest attendees
Country
Turkmenistan
CountryStatus applied forDate
BangladeshObserver2012
SyriaDialogue partner2015
IsraelDialogue partner2016
IraqDialogue partner2019
AlgeriaObserverJuly 2023

Activities

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) works on many important issues to help keep its member countries safe and strong. One of its main focuses is on security. The SCO talks about big problems like terrorism, separatism, and extremism. It also works to stop bad things like human trafficking and weapons trafficking.

The SCO also works with other groups on military matters, like sharing information and doing practice exercises. The SCO says it is not a military alliance. These exercises help members practice working together to keep peace and stop threats.

Besides security, the SCO helps its members work together on economics. This includes ideas like making it easier to trade goods, finding new energy sources, and thinking about new ways to handle money. The SCO also has programs to help students from member countries study in each other’s schools. Cultural activities, like festivals, also bring the countries closer together.

RATS Military exercises

In December 2025, Iran had its first military exercises with six other member states. These exercises were called the Sahand 2025 drills and happened on Iranian soil. They took place after a conflict between Israel and Iran.

Summits

The Shanghai Cooperation Organisation holds yearly meetings called summits. Leaders from member countries come together at these summits. The meetings move between different member countries, following the order of their names in Russian. At the summits, leaders talk about big topics like politics, money matters, and safety.

Before each big yearly summit, the foreign ministers meet to get ready. If needed, any two member countries can ask for extra meetings. Recent summits have been held in cities like Bishkek, Qingdao, and Samarkand.

Summits of heads of state
DateCountryLocation
14–15 June 2001 ChinaShanghai
7 June 2002 RussiaSaint Petersburg
29 May 2003 RussiaMoscow
17 June 2004 UzbekistanTashkent
5 July 2005 KazakhstanAstana
15 June 2006 ChinaShanghai
16 August 2007 KyrgyzstanBishkek
28 August 2008 TajikistanDushanbe
15–16 June 2009 RussiaYekaterinburg
10–11 June 2010 UzbekistanTashkent
14–15 June 2011 KazakhstanAstana
6–7 June 2012 ChinaBeijing
13 September 2013 KyrgyzstanBishkek
11–12 September 2014 TajikistanDushanbe
9–10 July 2015 RussiaUfa
23–24 June 2016 UzbekistanTashkent
8–9 June 2017 KazakhstanAstana
9–10 June 2018 ChinaQingdao
14–15 June 2019 KyrgyzstanBishkek
10 November 2020 RussiaVideo conference
16–17 September 2021 TajikistanDushanbe
15–16 September 2022 UzbekistanSamarkand
4 July 2023 IndiaVideo conference
3–4 July 2024 KazakhstanAstana
31 August – 1 September 2025 ChinaTianjin
2026 KyrgyzstanBishkek
2027 PakistanIslamabad
Summits of heads of government
DateCountryLocation
14 September 2001 KazakhstanAlmaty
23 September 2003 ChinaBeijing
23 September 2004 KyrgyzstanBishkek
26 October 2005 RussiaMoscow
15 September 2006 TajikistanDushanbe
2 November 2007 UzbekistanTashkent
30 October 2008 KazakhstanAstana
14 October 2009 ChinaBeijing
25 November 2010 TajikistanDushanbe
7 November 2011 RussiaSaint Petersburg
5 December 2012 KyrgyzstanBishkek
29 November 2013 UzbekistanTashkent
14–15 December 2014 KazakhstanAstana
14–15 December 2015 ChinaZhengzhou
2–3 November 2016 KyrgyzstanBishkek
30 November 2017 RussiaSochi
11–12 October 2018 TajikistanDushanbe
1–2 November 2019 UzbekistanTashkent
30 November 2020 IndiaVideo conference
25 November 2021 KazakhstanVideo conference
1 November 2022 ChinaVideo conference
26 Oсtober 2023 KyrgyzstanBishkek
15–16 October 2024 PakistanIslamabad
18 November 2025 RussiaMoscow
2026 TajikistanTBD

Analysis

SCO summit in Ufa, Russia in 2015

The United States wanted to join the SCO in 2005 but was not allowed. At that time, the SCO asked the U.S. to leave some countries where it had troops. Over time, the West has had different feelings about the SCO. At first, many were unsure about what the group planned to do. But later, some saw it as a way to help keep peace, especially in places like Afghanistan.

The SCO focuses on working together while respecting each country's rights. Some people think the SCO wants to balance power in the world, especially in areas like the Persian Gulf and Central Asia. The group is careful not to support actions that might upset other countries. Even though some see the SCO as a way to counter Western influence, its members do not always agree on everything. For example, during a conflict between Russia and Georgia in 2008, China did not support Russia. The SCO also stayed neutral during the conflict in Ukraine but worked to keep good relations between China and Russia.

Gallery of heads of state (members)

Here are the leaders of the countries that are members of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. Each picture shows the current head of state or government for each member country.

Gallery of Heads of Government members

This section shows the leaders of each member country in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation. The leaders include:

Images

World leaders meeting at an international summit.
Official meeting between political leaders Valentina Matvienko and Alexander Lukashenko.
Prime Minister Keir Starmer of the United Kingdom meets with Chinese leader Xi Jinping during an official visit in Beijing.
Portrait of Mojtaba Khamenei, a prominent political leader.
ADB President Masato Kanda meets with Kazakhstan President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev to discuss partnership and development projects.
Official portrait of President Sadyr Zhaparov of the Kyrgyz Republic.
Leaders from different countries meeting at an international summit in Russia in 2009.
Leaders attending the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit meeting in Bishkek, 2007.
Official meeting between presidents at a state reception in Azerbaijan.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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