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Afghanistan
ChinaDiplomacy

China calls for joint patrols on Afghan border and urges Taliban to help fight terrorism

Foreign Minister Wang Yi emphasises Beijing’s security concerns on a trip to Kabul, focusing on the Wakhan Corridor that borders Xinjiang

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Beijing is worried Uygur militants will try to use the Afghan-China border to enter Xinjiang. Photo: EPA
Fan Chen
China has called for greater counterterrorism cooperation with Afghanistan, including joint patrols along the narrow strip of land that forms their only shared border.

“China supports the prompt resumption of bilateral patrols in the Wakhan Corridor to maintain peace and stability in the border region,” Foreign Minister Wang Yi said during a meeting with the Afghan acting minister of interior affairs, Sirajuddin Haqqani.

The Wakhan Corridor is a narrow strip of mountainous Afghan territory that divides Tajikistan and Pakistan, including Pakistani-held parts of Kashmir, and includes a 74km (46-mile) border with China’s Xinjiang region.
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Beijing has repeatedly voiced concerns that Uygur militants could cross from Afghanistan into Xinjiang through that route.

On Wednesday, on his first trip to the country since March 2022, Wang called on the Taliban government to combat terrorist groups such as the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM), a Uygur separatist group.
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“We hope the Afghan side will continue to do its utmost to combat the ETIM terrorist forces, clearing obstacles and injecting momentum into the in-depth development of China-Afghanistan relations,” he told acting Afghan foreign minister Amir Khan Muttaqi.

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