Arab News

China, Pakistan look at including Afghanista­n in $57bn economic corridor

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BEIJING: China and Pakistan will look at extending their $57 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor to Afghanista­n, Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi said on Tuesday, part of China’s ambitious Belt and Road plan linking China with Asia, Europe and beyond.

China has tried to position itself as a helpful party to promote talks between Pakistan and Afghanista­n, both uneasy neighbors ever since Pakistan’s independen­ce in 1947.

Their ties have been poisoned in recent years by Afghan accusation­s that Pakistan is supporting Taliban insurgents fighting in US-backed Kabul in order to limit the influence of its old rival, India, in Afghanista­n.

Pakistan denied that and said it wants to see a peaceful, stable Afghanista­n.

Speaking after the first trilateral meeting between the foreign ministers of China, Pakistan and Afghanista­n, Wang said China hoped the economic corridor could benefit the whole region and act as an impetus for developmen­t.

Afghanista­n has urgent need to develop and improve people’s lives and hopes it can join inter-connectivi­ty initiative­s, Wang told reporters, as he announced that Pakistan and Afghanista­n had agreed to mend their strained relations.

“So China and Pakistan are willing to look at Afghanista­n, on the basis of win-win, mutually beneficial principles, using an appropriat­e means to extend the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor to Afghanista­n,” he added.

How that could happen needs the three countries to reach a gradual consensus, tackling easier, smaller projects first, Wang said, without giving details.

Pakistani Foreign Minister Khawaja Asif said his country and China were “iron brothers,” but did not directly mention the prospect of Afghanista­n joining the corridor.

“The successful implementa­tion of CPEC (China-Pakistan Economic Corridor) projects will serve as a model for enhancing connectivi­ty and cooperatio­n through similar projects with neighborin­g countries, including Afghanista­n and Iran, and with central and west Asia,” he said.

India has looked askance at the project as parts of it run through Pakistan-administer­ed Kashmir which India considers its own territory, though Wang said the plan had nothing to do with territoria­l disputes.

China has sought to bring Kabul and Islamabad together partly due to Chinese fears about the spread of religious militancy from Pakistan and Afghanista­n to the unrest-prone far western Chinese region of Xinjiang.

As such, China has pushed for Pakistan and Afghanista­n to improve their own ties so they can better tackle the violence in their respective countries, and has also tried to broker peace talks with Afghan Taliban militants, to limited effect.

A tentative talks process collapsed in 2015.

Wang said China fully supported peace talks between the Afghan government and the Taliban and would continue to provide “necessary facilitati­on.”

The Belt and Road infrastruc­ture drive aims to build a modernday “Silk Road” connecting China to economies in Southeast and Central Asia by land and the Middle East and Europe by sea.

 ??  ?? The Pakistan port of Gwadar is key to China’s economic ambitions in the region. (Reuters)
The Pakistan port of Gwadar is key to China’s economic ambitions in the region. (Reuters)

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