The September 2025 summit marked a turning point in Eurasia’s energy and economic policy. China and Russia signed a legally binding memorandum to build the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline, linking Western Siberian gas fields to China through Mongolia. With a planned capacity of 50bn cubic meters per year, the project will far exceed the existing Power of Siberia pipeline.
For Moscow, the pipeline secures a new major export market after losing access to European consumers. For Beijing, it provides a stable, long-term source of energy in an era of geopolitical risks and import diversification. China also announced expanded cooperation in renewable energy with Russia and other regional states, alongside his call to establish a SCO Development Bank as soon as possible to finance projects through grants and loans.
These moves reinforced the rapid growth of Russia’s oil trade with China and India, establishing the SCO’s energy partnership as a shield against Western sanctions. Pricing and purchase volumes under Power of Siberia 2 remain unresolved, yet the signing itself strengthened Moscow and Beijing’s role as leaders of Eurasian energy integration.
India’s strategy also reached a critical point. In August 2025, Washington imposed 50% tariffs on a wide range of Indian exports, from textiles to chemicals, in response to continued purchases of Russian oil. The tariffs sharply reduced India’s access to the U.S. market, threatening up to a 70% collapse in key export sectors.
Rejecting U.S. tariffs as unjustified, Indian leaders reaffirmed their course of strategic autonomy. Sanctions and tariffs thus acted as a catalyst for building new hubs of energy and transport in Eurasia, where China, Russia, and India are gradually shaping alternative power centers less dependent on U.S. and EU markets.
Western media and analysts cast the optics, especially the image of Xi, Putin, Kim, and Pezeshkian together, as an “axis of upheaval” aimed at the U.S.-led order, and European security voices warned the display reinforced Moscow’s claim that it can endure because it has powerful friends. The collective absence signaled a refusal to legitimize what many in the West view as an explicitly anti-Western coalition.
The administration tightened pressure on New Delhi over sanctions compliance even as critics pointed to a paradox, since U.S. tariffs and other unilateral measures, singled out in the summit’s language, may be accelerating non-Western alignment. Policy circles rallied around friend-shoring and control of chokepoints in finance, supply chains, and technology, with scenarios ranging from managed transactionalism to harder bifurcation or crisis-driven polarization. The prevailing view is that the unipolar moment is ending and the United States must adapt to a more complex multipolar order where even democratic partners exercise strategic autonomy.
The SCO’s recent evolution shows both promise and limits. It has become a framework for Eurasian energy and transport integration, reinforced by Russia–China pipeline projects, India’s Eurasian pivot, and Central Asia’s bridging role. Yet the experience of Iran demonstrates the shortcomings, so Asia Times.
“In times like these, it is children who suffer first and suffer most,” UNICEF said.
Support from UNICEF and its partners includes deploying mobile health and nutrition teams to treat the injured and screen children for malnutrition. Thousands of cartons of essential nutrition supplies, including ready-to-use therapeutic food, have been dispatched. UNICEF is also distributing water purification tablets and hundreds of family hygiene kits to affected communities.
“Children have suffered the most in this disaster. We are doing everything possible to save lives and protect children, but urgent help is needed today,” a UNICEF spokesperson voiced.
"Today's signing is a practical result of our joint work and a symbol of deepening strategic partnership with China in the field of green energy. This project will strengthen our energy system, create new jobs, and will be an important step towards achieving carbon neutrality goals," Akkenzhenov said.
President Shavkat Mirziyoyev and US President Donald Trump discussed strengthening the Uzbekistan–US strategic partnership, expanding trade and investment, enhancing security cooperation, and deepening cultural ties, as bilateral trade reached $509.5mn in 7M25—down 9% from 2024 but still nearly 59% higher than 2023.
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As a symbolic gesture, the Afghan flag introduced by the Taliban was raised for the first time over the Afghan Embassy in Moscow.
The 1990s were a challenging and turbulent period for the countries of the former Soviet Union. The collapse of the “Red Empire” triggered severe ethnic, religious, and political conflicts in several nations. Newly independent states such as Tajikistan, Georgia, Moldova, Azerbaijan, and Armenia found themselves engulfed in civil wars and armed conflicts. “Daryo” presents the stories of individuals who witnessed and endured the atrocities of the Tajik civil war (1992–1997), a conflict that claimed thousands of lives.
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Imam Al-Bukhari and Sukarno, a theatrical-musical production celebrating the shared cultural heritage of Indonesia and Uzbekistan, had its world premiere in Samarkand in November 2024. Featuring over 60 performers, the play brings to life the journey of Indonesia’s first president, Sukarno, to Uzbekistan in 1956. "This project represents a cultural dialogue," says Restu Imansari Kusumaningrum, the play's Artistic Director. "The arts need to be supported, not just by the government, but by the community—by private donors and philanthropists. Without them, many of these stories would remain untold." With a production cost of over $100,000, the production showcases the crucial role of private sector support in making such cultural initiatives a reality.
Renowned singer Shuhrat Daryo echoed the deputy minister's sentiments, expressing his disappointment for Uzbek art and the nation as a whole after watching the show.
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