Markets  |  Sat Mar 28, 2015 8:30am EDT         
More countries say to join China-backed AIIB investment bank 
SHANGHAI/RIO DE JANEIRO     China's President Xi Jinping (front C) poses for 
photos with guests at the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank launch ceremony 
at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing October 24, 2014.  Reuters/Takaki 
Yajima/Pool
  SHANGHAI/RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Russia, Australia and the Netherlands on 
Saturday became the latest three countries to say they plan to join the 
China-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), adding clout to an 
institution seen as enhancing China's regional and global influence.The AIIB, 
seen as a challenge to existing institutions the World Bank and Asian 
Development Bank, has drawn a cool response from the United States, despite 
which European U.S. allies including Britain, France, Germany and Italy have 
already announced they would join the bank.Other countries such as Turkey and 
South Korea have also said they would join. Brazil, China's top trading 
partner, said on Friday it would sign up and that there were no conditions set. 
"Brazil is very interested in participating in this initiative," the office of 
President Dilma Rousseff said in a statement.Russian First Deputy Prime 
Minister Igor Shuvalov, speaking on Saturday at a forum in Boao on the southern 
Chinese island of Hainan, said the country plans to join the AIIB, according to 
the official Xinhua news agency.Speaking at the same forum, Australian Finance 
Minister Mathias Cormann said the country was planning to apply to become a 
founding member, according to Xinhua.And the Netherlands also plans to join, 
Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte said on his official Facebook page after a 
meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping.China's Finance Ministry said earlier 
on Saturday Britain and Switzerland had been formally accepted as founding 
members of the AIIB, a day after Brazil accepted China's invitation to join. 
China's Finance Ministry said Austria had also applied to join and had 
submitted its documents to China."We should push forward with the creation of a 
regional hub for financial co-operation," Xi said at the forum, adding China 
should "strengthen pragmatic cooperation in monetary stability, investment, 
financing, credit rating and other fields."The AIIB has been seen as a 
significant setback to U.S. efforts to extend its influence in the Asia Pacific 
region to balance China's growing financial clout and assertiveness. (Reporting 
by Stephen Eisenhammer; Additional reporting by Ben Blanchard in Beijing, Engen 
Tham in Shanghai and Adam Jourdan in Boao; Editing by Michael Perry and David 
Holmes)

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