Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

China backs Pakistan on FATF, counters US diplomat on CPEC

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

ISLAMABAD/BEIJING/NEW DELHI: As FATF held a key meeting in Beijing, China on Thursday said its close ally Pakistan has made “visible progress” and should be backed by the world community on countering terror financing.

India’s external affairs ministry declined to comment on the working of the Financial Action Task Force citing the confidenti­ality of its working, but spokespers­on Raveesh Kumar noted that the global watchdog’s last plenary meeting in October had expressed “very serious concern” at Pakistan’s overall lack of progress in implementi­ng an action plan.

A Pakistani delegation led by economic affairs minister Hammad Azhar had defended the country’s efforts to comply with the action plan at the meeting of FATF’s Asia Pacific Joint Group in Beijing, as the country sought to gain more time to fully implement the plan. Pakistan was placed in FATF’s “grey list” in 2018 for not doing enough to counter fund-raising by al-Qaeda, Taliban, Lashkar-e-Taiba and Jaishe-Mohammed. Since then, it has missed several deadlines to implement the action plan.

FATF’s next plenary meeting, to be held in Paris from February 16, will decide whether to retain Pakistan in the grey list or move it to the “black list”, which will entail harsher sanctions.

Chinese foreign ministry spokespers­on Geng Shuang told reporters he wasn’t aware of the details of the Beijing meeting but said: “Pakistan has made all-out efforts to strengthen the domestic counter-terror financing regime with visible progress. Its political will and active efforts should be recognised and encouraged by the internatio­nal community.

“We hope FATF will offer Pakistan constructi­ve support and assistance in its continued efforts to improve its counter-terrorism financing system and effectivel­y fight terrorist financing.”

China is the current president of FATF and co-chair of the Asia Pacific Joint Group. Geng added China will continue to uphold an impartial and constructi­ve attitude in discussion­s.

In New Delhi, external affairs ministry spokespers­on Kumar said India presumes that FATF will evaluate Pakistan’s progress on the basis of set criteria. “You may recall that at the last plenary meeting in Paris is October, the body had expressed very serious concerns with the overall lack of progress by Pakistan to address its terror financing risks.”

People familiar with developmen­ts said Pakistan is banking on support from China, Malaysia and Turkey to stymie any possible move to put it in the black list. The most likely outcome of the upcoming Paris meeting will be that Pakistan will remain in the grey list for at least another six months, they said.

CPEC: WELLS SLAMMED FOR ‘PACK OF LIES’

In a strong statement, China rejected US diplomat Alice Wells’ comments against the China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), terming it a “pack of lies”.

The Chinese embassy in Islamabad said the US acting assistant secretary for South and Central Asian affairs made “negative” comments on the CPEC, which were a repetition of the cliches from her November 2019 speech.

Despite repeated rejection, the US still ignores the facts and is obsessed with the story it has made for the CPEC, it said.

“While you can never wake up a person who is pretending to be asleep, we have to make our position clear and reject the negative propaganda by the US. We must not let the truth be distorted and the lies run wild.”

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