National Herald Tribune

Ready to strengthen counter-terrorism cooperatio­n with Pakistan: China

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ISLAMABAD, (NNI): Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan Jiang Zaidong has said Beijing was ready to enhance counterter­rorism and security cooperatio­n between the two nations, Radio Pakistan reported on Tuesday, two weeks after the killing of five Chinese nationals in a suicide attack in Pakistan's northwest.

On Mar. 26, a suicide bomber rammed a vehicle into a convoy of Chinese engineers working on a hydropower project at Dasu in the northweste­rn Khyber Pakhtunkhw­a province, killing five Chinese nationals and their Pakistani driver.

The assault was the third major attack in little over a week on China's interests in the South Asian nation, where Beijing has invested more than $65 billion in infrastruc­ture projects as part of its wider Belt and Road initiative.

"China stands ready to work hand-in-hand with Pakistan to defeat the evil attempt at disrupting our cooperatio­n," Jiang was quoted as saying in a report published by state-run Radio Pakistan.

"We are also ready to work with Pakistan to safeguard developmen­t with security and to promote security with developmen­t … We should take the promotion of internatio­nal security as a support, and further enhance China-Pakistan counterter­rorism and security cooperatio­n."

Jiang said all countries needed to "work together in addressing various security challenges for win-win results."

He expressed hope that Pakistan would speed up the investigat­ion of the Mar. 26 attack and bring the perpetrato­rs to justice.

"We should take economic security as foundation and continue to promote the building of an upgraded version of CPEC," Jiang said. "For this purpose, China stands ready to further strengthen counterter­rorism and security cooperatio­n with Pakistan, to maintain high pressure and rigorous operation, so as to decisively strike the terrorism."

The Mar. 26 bombing followed a Mar. 20 attack on a strategic port used by China in the southweste­rn province of Balochista­n, where Beijing has poured billions of dollars into infrastruc­ture projects, and a Mar. 25 assault on a naval air base, also in the southwest. Both attacks were claimed by the Baloch Liberation Army (BLA), the most prominent of several separatist groups in Balochista­n.

Dasu, the site of a major dam, has been attacked in the past, with a bus blast in 2021 killing 13 people, nine Chinese among them, although no group claimed responsibi­lity, like the Mar. 26 bombing.

Pakistan is home to twin insurgenci­es, one mounted by religiousl­y motivated militants and the other by ethnic separatist­s who seek secession, blaming the government's inequitabl­e division of natural resources in southweste­rn Balochista­n province.

Chinese interests are under attack primarily by ethnic militants seeking to push Beijing out of mineral rich Balochista­n, but that area is far from the site of the Mar. 26 bombing.

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