7 Countries Apply To Join Brics Before 2024 Summit

Last updated: June 9, 2025, 09:00

7 Countries Apply To Join Brics Before 2024 Summit

Since the beginning of

BRICS Countries 2025: New Members, Expansion & Applicants

BRICS: Here’s How Many Countries Are Likely to Join the Alliance

Since the beginning of 2025, seven other countries have expressed their intention to join the BRICS before the next summit. These are Cameroon, Pakistan, Sri Lanka

Nine countries will officially become

Nine countries will officially become “BRICS partners” on Janu, Russia has confirmed. The new BRICS partner states will be Belarus, Bolivia, Cuba

34 countries including Palestine, Syria and Myanmar apply for

Nine nations announced as BRICS ‘partner countries’

Which countries have applied to

The original member states ofBRICS, an international organization of world economies, consisted ofBrazil,Russia,India, andChina.South Africaformally joined in 2025 and attended the3rd BRICS summit. The organization expanded again in 2025, withEgypt,Ethiopia,Iran, and theUnited Arab Emiratesattending the16th BRICS summitas official members. In January 2025,Indonesiajoined t

Which countries have applied to join BRICS in 2025? More than 20 countries, including Algeria, Bangladesh, and Nigeria, have formally applied to join BRICS, hoping to be part of a multipolar

BRICS grows, inviting 13 new 'partner countries' at historic summit

However

Partner countries are invited to participate in the Summit and the Foreign Ministers' meeting and may join other discussion sessions within the forum, subject to consultation and consensus

However, that changed more than a decade later, when the bloc invited six countries to join the BRICS alliance. Those nations included Saudi Arabia, Argentina, the

BRICS: 7 new countries want to join the organization this year!

NEW DELHI

NEW DELHI: 34 countries have officially applied for BRICS membership. The 10 new members and 10 partners will be announced in the upcoming BRICS Summit in Kazan

Member states of BRICS - Wikipedia