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Afghanistan’s man at UN urges China to put pressure on Pakistan over terrorism By Catherine Wong in The SCMP, Oct 2, 2016

Afghanistan’s UN ambassador says Pakistan is providing a safe haven for terrorists, such as the Taliban, and has called on China to assert its influence and dissuade Islamabad from supporting terrorist groups in the region.
Mahmoud Saikal said neighbouring Pakistan’s support of terrorist groups was the root cause of unrest in Afghanistan.
“Most terrorist activities [in Afghanistan] have links to Pakistan,” he said.
“The question is not about the Taliban. The question is about the forces behind the Taliban. Who is providing the safe havens and logistic supports to the Taliban?”
Pakistan has allegedly been closely associated with the Taliban since its birth in the mid-1990s. The Afghan government has accused Pakistan of financing the Taliban, an allegation Pakistani authorities deny.
Former Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour was killed in a US drone strike in Pakistan in May and Osama bin Laden, the founder and head of the Islamist group, al-Qaeda, which was behind the September 11, 2001, attacks on the United States, was killed in Pakistan in May 2011.
Saikal said the Pakistan military, by supplying arms to terrorist groups and allowing them to establish bases in its territory, had used the Taliban and al-Qaeda and other proxies to wage an undeclared war against regional rival India, with Afghanistan falling victim to the complex and often hostile relationship between its two neighbours.
“On a daily basis, we lose about 30 to 40 people in Afghanistan because of violence, extremism, abuse and terrorism, with the majority of them civilians,” Saikal said.
“It’s a matter of circles within Pakistan, who use the Taliban as a proxy for their misguided strategic interests. So this is why we need to deal with the issue at its core and not deal with the consequences of it.”
China has also suffered from the spread of terrorism in the region. Unrest in northwest China’s Xinjiang region is blamed by Beijing on the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a Muslim separatist group founded by militant Uygurs.
The problem has been a major headache for the Communist Party.
“Almost all members of ETIM who have left China have gone to Pakistan,” Saikal said.
Late Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mohammad Mansour. Photo: Reuters
“They have received training in Pakistan and have been trying hard to return to China to cause trouble.
“China should tell its strategic partner, Pakistan, to stop receiving members of ETIM, to stop their activities there, and stop their training there.”
Since December, China, Afghanistan, the US and Pakistan have been working for reconciliation in Afghanistan as members of what has been dubbed the “quadrilateral coordination group”.
“China has been an active member,” Saikal said. “We feel that China is working hard. But so far we see no sign of a paradigm shift on the part of Pakistan. We appeal to China to continue its efforts.”
In March, Taliban insurgents rejected an offer of peace talks from the Afghan government.
US Army General John Nicholson, the top American commander in Afghanistan, said in early September that the Taliban controlled more than 10 per cent of the Afghan population and was battling with the government for control of at least another 20 per cent.
Saikal said the quadrilateral coordination group, with the full participation of China, “needs to work harder” at achieving a breakthrough – in particular, by influencing the terror groups’ major sponsor, Pakistan.
“China has soft power,” Saikal said. “That image of soft power could be tarnished if you have a strategic partner who believes in the use of violence in the pursuit of political objectives.
“We have seen China has its own way of influencing [international affairs] and we have yet to see the Chinese way of influencing Pakistan.”
While the deadlock goes on, Afghanistan has continued to draw support from the international community. The Afghan envoy said military equipment sent from countries including China, the US and the Nato members, India, Russia and Turkey had beefed up the defensive capabilities of Afghan forces.
The much better-equipped Afghan forces had successfully resisted a major attack by the Taliban during spring and summer in April in Kabul, Afghanistan’s capital, and had also inflicted heavy losses on the Taliban, Saikal said.
Despite the continuing violence, Saikal said Afghanistan had been working hard on efforts to rebuild the country, thanks to the support of Beijing.
In early September, the first-ever cargo train from China arrived in northern Afghanistan’s Hairatan port, about 450km north of Kabul.
Saikal said the cargo train, which now runs twice a month – but could turn into a weekly passage for both cargo and tourists in the near future – would open up a new trade route between China and Afghanistan.
“We feel that there is a potential for increasing the trade volume that is a lot higher than the existing half a billion [US] dollars,” Saikal said.
The inaugural freight train on a line from China to Afghanistan leaves its depot in August. Photo: Reuters
“The bulk of [the existing bilateral trade] is Chinese imports to Afghanistan, and [the level of] our exports is very small. So we hope that we can bring a balance to our trade,” he said, adding that the Chinese market could soon receive Afghan exports of marble, dried and fresh fruits, carpets and saffron – the world’s most expensive spice.
A large part of China’s engagement in Afghanistan has seen it investing in tapping the country’s mineral resources, which are estimated to have a value of US$1 trillion.
A Chinese government-backed mining company spent US$3 billion on a copper mine project in Mes Aynak, an ancient Buddhist city. But the lack of any comprehensive railway network to transport the metal out of the landlocked country has posed a huge challenge to developing the project further.
A mining site near a sprawling 2,600-year-old Buddhist monastery in Mes Aynak, where a Chinese government-backed mining company spent US$3 billion on a copper mine project. Photo: AP
When Afghanistan’s President Ashraf Ghani first visited China in 2014, Beijing promised to support his nation’s infrastructure plan by providing expertise and funds to help Afghanistan build roads and gas and water pipelines across the country.
China has also provided funds for Afghanistan to build 10,000 residential units in Kabul to accommodate the massive flow of the nation’s refugee returnees in recent years.
“Around 60 to 65 per cent of the houses you see in Kabul are informal because we have seen such a massive return [of refugees],” Saikal said.
“It’s impossible for any government to provide housing for such a big number of people. So this is why providing affordable housing for our people is important.”
With an improved infrastructure network, Saikal said Kabul hoped to capitalise on its geographical location and abundance of natural resources to turn itself into a “trade and transit hub” connecting central Asia, South Asia, the Far East and the Middle East, and to play an active role in China’s “One Belt One Road” initiative.
This initiative refers to Beijing’s development strategy to revive the land and maritime Silk Roads dating back to the days of Marco Polo. “Belt” refers to a vast area in Eurasia, and “Road” stands for the sea route that links China’s coastal cities to Africa and the Mediterranean, passing key ports in Southeast Asia and the Suez Canal.
However, the Afghan envoy also reiterated the importance of securing the much-coveted stability in the war-torn Afghanistan.
“For the success of Chinese diplomacy in the region, and for the success of the “One Belt One Road” initiative of China, we need a secure region,” he said. http://www.scmp.com/news/china/diplomacy-defence/article/2023993/afghanistans-man-un-urges-china-put-pressure-pakistan

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