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Home » Transcript: Russia’s Putin, Indonesia’s Prabowo, China’s Ding Speak at SPIEF 2025

Transcript: Russia’s Putin, Indonesia’s Prabowo, China’s Ding Speak at SPIEF 2025

Read the full transcript of remarks from China’s Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang, Indonesia’s President Prabowo Subianto, Russia’s Vladimir Putin, Bahrain’s Sheikh Nasser, and South Africa’s Deputy President Paul Mashatile at the SPIEF 2025 plenary session in Saint Petersburg, June 20, 2025.

Opening Remarks and Russia’s Vision for a Multipolar World

Moderator: Thank you so much for the heavily loaded speeches that will only make my mission more difficult. I’d like to start with President Putin. The overarching theme of this year’s forum is shared values in a multipolar world. This is a very, very high ambitious ceiling. What does Russia bring to the table in that regard?

President Putin: In fact, I tried to bring this across in my intervention. I think whatever Russia is doing is aimed to bring together the efforts of all our partners or friends or those who are willing to work with Russia to address those global civilizational tasks.

First of all, we seek to achieve a balanced global development so that this development is aligned with the interests of as many countries as possible. We seek to build a multipolar world order where the participants of international relations agree among themselves, design instruments and tools that would help find solutions even in the most difficult of conditions, such solutions that would benefit everybody and not just individual groupings or associations, be it military or economic blocks. I think that today’s meeting, today’s event, that as is now arranged by Russia, aims to achieve this.

Objective Trends vs. Resistance to Current Order

Moderator: Sometimes, Mister President, this effort to build the multipolar world seems like more of a resistance of an existing order rather than a genuine, consistent, coherent effort to create the multipolar world that you’re talking about? Is an objective driven effort or it’s only resisting current you know, unfavorable kind of order?

President Putin: I think, and on many occasions and the different locations, I mentioned this, the changes are happening irrespective of whether we help those changes or not. Those are objective trends of global development. You know, in my speech and on many other occasions, including here at the St. Petersburg Economic Forum last year, I mentioned that the changes in the world are happening, and those are fundamental changes.

They are due to the fact that new economic leaders emerge. Just look at what’s happened over the past years. Look at how the share of the so called G7 was shrinking in the global economy. It is shrinking every year. And look at how the share of the countries that got together under BRICS has been growing. Again, this is an objective process. And it has nothing to do with any clashes or military conflicts. No. It’s been on for decades.

And when we’re told, look, you in Russia, you implemented this pivot to the Global South, to Asia, oh no. Those decisions had long been taken because we consider it the trends of the global development. And again, those are objective trends. Our colleague from South Africa just spoke, 2.5 billion of people in Africa. And again, this is a medical fact. This is what’s going to happen, and there is no stopping it.

All those nations, all those continents, all those peoples would seek to improve their standards of living. And definitely, would try to enhance their economic and humanitarian capabilities. And again, those are inevitable things that are happening in our civilization. Our task is to make this process, this inevitable process, a civilized shape.

And altogether, we should take efforts that not only would accelerate those processes, but make those processes balanced so that the decisions are made on a timely basis and the decisions are most effective and would benefit all the participants of the process, including the countries that, one way or another, are somehow losing their positions in the global economy.

Look, we want to agree with them. We are ready to agree with them if they want to. However, if they want to maintain their monopoly at all costs, if they want to keep the instruments of colonial influence in the world, well, they will have to be happy with the situation they are gradually sliding to. Now whatever we are doing at the national level, for instance, given our domestic and foreign policy and together with our friends and partners, this is what we’re doing.

Indonesia’s Non-Aligned Stance in a Polarizing World

Moderator: And obviously, they have the tools to cripple this endeavor that you just summarized, Mister President. So I would ask President Prabowo of Indonesia. Indonesia has always walked a fine line, has always, as you mentioned in your speech, a non aligned been a non aligned state. But as the world becomes more and more complicated, can Asian countries, ASEAN countries stay non aligned or this is more and more not an option or a very, very narrow option as we go forward?

President Prabowo: Thank you. I think in my opinion is it’s not easy, but but it’s a line that we are determined to maintain. As I said, we we respect all the great powers. We respect our neighbors, and we really believe that the only way for prosperity is collaboration, cooperation, and peaceful coexistence, and this is what we try to achieve.

So we want to maintain good relations, and we try to convince all parties that the way the only way forward in this this planet is getting smaller. We cannot afford rivalry that that is going nowhere that can only if it goes into confrontation. So, no, I am I am convinced that we have to maintain this this path of non alignment.

China’s Perspective on Russia-US Relations

Moderator: Mister Vice Premier of China, China and Russia are building with others this new order in the world. But if you look last year, things started to ease up between Moscow and Washington. There is more dialogue between President Donald Trump and President Putin. Is this a source of concern for you in China? And how do you see the developing relationships between the leading powers in the world?

Vice Premier Ding Xuexiang: Thank you very much for your question.