At a SCO Heads of Government summit, Pakistan is invited to co-sponsor a joint declaration on regional counter-terrorism cooperation. India, also a SCO member, objects to language Pakistan inserted about "state-sponsored terrorism." What principle of SCO decision-making complicates resolution of this deadlock?
Q1. At a SCO Heads of Government summit, Pakistan is invited to co-sponsor a joint declaration on regional counter-terrorism cooperation. India, also a SCO member, objects to language Pakistan inserted about "state-sponsored terrorism." What principle of SCO decision-making complicates resolution of this deadlock?
Answer: SCO operates on consensus, meaning any member's objection prevents adoption of joint declarations
Explanation: The SCO operates strictly on the principle of consensus decision-making, meaning all nine full members must agree for any joint declaration or resolution to be adopted; a single member's objection is sufficient to block any statement, which frequently paralyzes Pakistan-India coordination.