Only brics bros can post in this thread, firsties are not welcome
/brics/thread
hello brics brother
The S in brics is for South Africa... but Spain fren is more than welcome to stay
Hello brothers
>India is reading mein kampf
Hello sir, how was your morning?
I had a test in the morning, i nailed it, I've another test tomorrow, but the papers are subjective so I don't need to study and can waste my time here instead
Good to know indian bro, wish you the best of luck for your next text
Thank you brazil bro, same to you for any event you have coming up next
Hello sirs, hello my brothers.
Why does BRICS include south africa? Feels like a sort of random country, I understand every other being there due to size and overall strength of economy, but I could think of many other countries that could be there instead that are also sort of unaligned and growing, like Indonesia. Is it just because they wanted an african country? If so why not Nigeria?
Eating some chocco cookies i made myself, yummy stuff.
S is for Scandinavia
Someone knowledgeable pls answer this, i wanna know myself
We needed some quotas, thats all
Saffrica was a booming economy when the block was created, BRICS itself is about developing economics and they were one of those in growth.
Nowadays other countries are being considered to join, mainly Turkey and Indonesia.
Can my friend pass as a brazilian?
We should let Indonesia in
Why even censor the eyes?
everyone can pass as a brazilian
>South Africa officially became a member nation on 24 December 2010, after being formally invited by China to join[19] and subsequently accepted by other BRIC countries.[18]
>Since 2007 China-South African relations have become increasingly close with increasing trade, policy and political ties.[2][3]
>From 2000 to 2011, there are approximately 37 Chinese official development finance projects identified in South Africa through various media reports.[28]
>Brazil has provided military assistance to South Africa in the form of warfare training and logistics. Bilateral relations between the countries have recently increased, as a result of Brazil's new South-South foreign policy aimed to strengthen integration between the major powers of the developing world.