A senior US diplomat said it was up to individual countries whether to join a new China-led inter­national development bank as media reports said a growing number of close US allies were ignoring Washington’s pressure to stay out of the institution.

France, Germany and Italy have agreed to follow Britain’s lead and join the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank (AIIB), the Financial Times reported, quoting European officials.

The newspaper said the decision by the four countries to become members of the AIIB was a major diplomatic setback for Washington, which has questioned if the new bank will have high standards of governance and environmental and social safeguards.

China said March 31 is the deadline for accepting founder-members into the organisation

The bank is also seen as contributing to the spread of China’s “soft power” in the region, possibly at the expense of the United States.

EU Parliament president Martin Schulz said he welcomed the four European nations joining the AIIB, but added the bank must conform to inter­nationally accepted standards.

“I find it good that they join,” he told reporters while on a visit to Beijing. “If more member states would join I would find it even better.

“There is one additional element. Such new organisations must answer to the requirements of inter­national standards. That is quite important.”

China’s state-owned Xinhua news agency said South Korea, Switzerland and Luxembourg were also considering joining.

However, Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei would not comment on which countries had applied to join, and repeated that the bank would be “open, inclusive, transparent and responsible”.

Yesterday, Washington’s top diplomat for east Asia signalled that concerns about the AIIB remained, but the decision on whether to join was up to individual nations.

“Our messaging to the Chinese consistently has been to welcome investment in infrastructure but to seek unmistakable evidence that this bank...takes as its starting point the high watermark of what other multilateral development banks have done in terms of governance,” US Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs Daniel Russel said in Seoul.

“Every government can make its own decision about whether the way to achieve that goal is by joining before the articles of agreement are clarified or by waiting to see what the evidence looks like as the bank starts to operate,” he told reporters.

The AIIB was launched in Beijing last year to spur investment in Asia in transportation, energy, telecommunications and other infrastructure. It was seen as a rival to the Western-dominated World Bank and the Asian Development Bank.

China said earlier this year a total of 26 countries had been included as founder members, mostly from Asia and the Middle East. It plans to finalise the articles of agreement by the end of the year.

A Finance Ministry official in India, one of the countries that has joined, said the members of the AIIB would meet in Almaty, Kazakhstan, on March 29-31 to discuss the articles of agreement.

China has said March 31 is the deadline for accepting founder-members into the organisation.

Japan, Australia and South Korea remain notable regional absentees from the AIIB, although Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott said at the weekend he would make a final decision on AIIB membership soon.

South Korea has said it is still in discussions with China and other countries about its possible participation.

Japan is unlikely to join the China-backed bank, but the head of the ADB, Takehiko Nakao, told the Nikkei Asian Review that the two institutions were in discussions and could cooperate.

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