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China official visits Afghanistan, signs security deal
China has signed
security and economic agreements with Afghanistan during a rare trip
to Kabul by a top Chinese official, in deals seen aimed at bolstering
Beijing's influence ahead of a NATO withdrawal of most combat forces
by 2014.
23
September, 2012
Zhou
Yongkang, China's domestic security chief and a member of the ruling
Communist Party's central Politburo, made an unannounced visit to the
Afghan capital late on Saturday, holding talks with Afghan President
Hamid Karzai at his garden palace.
Zhou's
visit was the first to Afghanistan by a senior Chinese leader since
1966 and followed a visit by Karzai to Beijing in June when both
countries agreed to cooperate on combating extremism in the region.
During
the talks, held under tight security after violent protests in Kabul
over a film which insults Islam, Zhou signed agreements on increased
security and economic cooperation, including a deal to help "train,
fund and equip Afghan police".
The
agreement was not specific on how much assistance China planned to
give the 149,000-strong police force, which is currently trained by
the NATO-led coalition.
"It
is in line with the fundamental interests of the two peoples for
China and Afghanistan to strengthen a strategic and cooperative
partnership which is also conducive to regional peace, stability and
development," Zhou said in a statement, according to China's
official Xinhua news agency.
Resource-hungry
China, which has a small border with Afghanistan in the country's
mountainous north-eastern corridor, is keen to invest in Afghan
resource deposits worth as much as $1 trillion, based on U.S.
Pentagon estimates.
Chinese
state-owned miner China Metallurgical Group (MCC) operates the $3
billion Aynak copper mine in eastern Logar province, which has been
subject to rocket attacks and other raids by insurgent groups looking
to disrupt operations.
MCC
won the contract to develop Aynak in 2008 and it was originally
scheduled to begin production in 2013, but work has been delayed by
the discovery of a huge and significant archaeological site in the
area.
Zhou's
visit underscores the concern in Beijing about a deterioration in
security as the NATO presence in Afghanistan winds down.
It
also comes after Karzai last week voiced concern about strategic
pacts signed with chief ally the United States earlier this year
ahead of talks starting in three weeks' time on a continued U.S.
troop presence in Afghanistan beyond 2014.
Zhou
had originally been scheduled to travel to Turkmenistan following a
visit to Singapore, but diverted to Afghanistan for the meeting.
The
Chinese government fully respects the right of the Afghan people to
choose their own path of development and will actively participate in
Afghanistan's reconstruction, Zhou told Karzai, according to Xinhua.
Karzai
said security in the region "depends on the relations between
Afghanistan and its neighbours", presidential spokesman Aimal
Faizi said, with both countries agreeing to expand their so far
limited ties.
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