BEIJING: Countries from five continents formally signed up Monday to the China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank — a potential rival to the Washington-based World Bank — as Beijing steps up its global diplomatic and economic role.Australia was the first country to sign the articles of association creating the AIIB´s legal
will still have an outsized say and a block on some votes which require a 75 percent majority — including the choice of the bank´s president, suspensions of members, and changes to the rules.
“China´s shareholding and its voting power at the establishment of the AIIB is a natural result led by the rules decided by all members,” said Shi Yaobin, a vice finance minister, according to the official Xinhua news agency.
“China is not deliberately pursuing the veto power,” he added, saying share percentages could be diluted by future new admissions.
Among non-Asian participants, Germany is the largest shareholder with 4.5 percent, followed by France with 3.4 percent and Brazil on 3.2 percent.
The AIIB is expected to go into operation later this year and its headquarters will be in Beijing, despite calls from Indonesia that it be based in Jakarta, further cementing China´s prominence in the institution.
But all financial terms in the agreement are in US dollars, rather than China´s currency, the renminbi, and the bank´s working language will be English.
Only 50 of the 57 countries that have applied for founding membership signed up in Beijing on Monday, and the finance ministry said the remainder — Denmark, Kuwait, Malaysia, Philippines, Poland, South Africa and Thailand — have yet to ratify the necessary agreements.
Washington sought to dissuade its allies from taking part but European countries including Britain, France and Germany have rushed to sign up as they seek to bolster ties with the world´s second-largest economy.