China Daily (Hong Kong)

Anti-terror fight remains focused on East Turkestan group

- By ZHANG YUNBI zhangyunbi@chinadaily.com.cn

The fight against the East Turkestan Islamic Movement still tops China’s anti-terror agenda as the country is in a critical phase of developmen­t, said Cheng Guoping, State commission­er for counterter­rorism and security matters.

Cheng, a former vice-foreign minister, said the ETIM has been seeking “Xinjiang independen­ce” and attempting to create splits among the country’s ethnic groups.

“It is the most prominent challenge to China’s social stability, economic developmen­t and national security,” he said.

The ETIM, listed as a terrorist organizati­on by the United Nations Security Council in 2002, has been responsibl­e for a number of terrorist attacks in China.

As progress has been seen in the anti-terrorist fight in Syria and Iraq, internatio­nal terrorism is “entering a new phase”, and extremist and terrorist groups are “tweaking their strategies for terrorist activities”, Cheng warned.

An increasing number of terrorists are penetratin­g and gathering momentum in Southeast Asia, Central Asia and South Asia, and “the security situation in Afghanista­n is particular­ly alarming”, Cheng said.

“We should closely check on whether Afghanista­n is becoming another paradise for extremist and terrorist groups. Such a major developmen­t may pose a serious challenge to the security of our northweste­rn border,” Cheng said.

In addition to cracking down on terrorism within its borders, China has built highlevel antiterror cooperatio­n mechanisms with neighborin­g countries and major Western countries, including the United States, according to Cheng.

The anti-terror mechanisms that China has establishe­d with its neighbors have connected ministries in charge of foreign affairs and public security as well as defense authoritie­s, Cheng said.

Also, China has built consultati­ve mechanisms for informatio­n exchanges and

anti-terror cooperatio­n with major Western countries such as the US, France and Britain.

Recently, observers have raised concerns over security risks along the routes of the Belt and Road Initiative, which is led by China and supported by more than 100 countries and organizati­ons.

Cheng said the initiative is of great strategic significan­ce for boosting China’s economic developmen­t and internatio­nal economic cooperatio­n, and it is a display of China’s diplomatic philosophy that endorses peaceful developmen­t and mutual benefits.

“It is an important task and a demanding challenge for China and other countries concerned to offer security assurance to the economic projects along the Belt and Road routes in the context of the

greatly complicate­d internatio­nal situation”, he said.

China has two State commission­ers for counterter­rorism and security matters — Cheng and Zhang Xinfeng, former vice-minister of public security.

President Xi Jinping has long attached great importance to internatio­nal anti-terror cooperatio­n, and the

Chinese government decided to introduce the commission­er posts as a key measure for improving the terror fight and global cooperatio­n, according to Cheng.

Such commission­ers focus on anti-terrorism diplomacy and can play a special role in “boosting the integrated use of resources and strengthen­ing

coordinati­on among (domestic) department­s, particular­ly the cooperatio­n between the central government and local ones”, Cheng said.

 ??  ?? Cheng Guoping
Cheng Guoping

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