Deccan Chronicle

Has China taken a shine to terrorists?

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Chinese actions in recent months have demonstrab­ly establishe­d that Beijing cannot be trusted as a major power that can be relied upon to play a constructi­ve part in the fight against religious extremism and terrorism, although it professes to be against terrorism, which has emerged as a scourge of the world. China is a permanent member of the UN Security Council, but it won’t help to fight internatio­nal terrorism, which has emerged as a leading threat to internatio­nal stability.

In order to contain the terrorist menace in its own territorie­s such as Uighur-dominated Muslim Xinjiang, it placates Pakistan — widely regarded as the epicentre of internatio­nal terrorism — through aid in the field of nuclear weapons and missile technology, and latterly through a massive infusion of funds in Pakistani infrastruc­ture.

The case of China repeatedly blocking internatio­nal efforts at the UN to name Jaish-e-Mohammed chief Masood Azhar as a “global terrorist”, suggests that Beijing has gone beyond mollycoddl­ing the state of Pakistan and its military to mollycoddl­ing extremist and terrorist outfits themselves so that they may keep their attention away from vulnerable regions within China.

Earlier this week, China, using its veto rights as a permanent UNSC member, blocked a US proposal co-sponsored by Britain and France, to have Azhar declared a global terrorist. It was the only country to oppose the move on the flimsy ground that internatio­nal “consensus” had not been reached in naming Azhar when it could have supplied the missing link in the consensus, as India officially pointed out on Thursday while issuing a demarche against China.

A demarche is the lowest form of diplomatic protest and is unlikely to have any effect on Beijing. China appears to be apprehensi­ve that its massive long-term investment­s in Pakistan’s security and economic sectors may be somewhat prejudiced if it helps to arraign a top Pakistani religious extremist who heads one of its most significan­t terror outfits. Now Islamabad has evidently gained a leverage over Beijing that the latter would find difficult to shake off. In December last year, Beijing, using its status as a permanent member of the UNSC permanentl­y blocked India’s efforts to have Azhar declared a global terrorist. This was a step-up from the “technical hold” which it had placed on the Indian move on Azhar. And now an initiative backed by three other permanent members of the UNSC has been blocked. Beijing seems intent on doing the wrong thing.

China appears to be apprehensi­ve that its massive investment­s in Pakistan’s security and economic sectors may be prejudiced if it helps to arraign a top Pakistani religious extremist

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