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Opinion: why Afghanistan’s stability is so important to China

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A file picture taken in August last year of Taliban suicide bombers standing guard during a gathering of a breakaway faction of the militant group in Zabul province, Afghanistan. Photo: Associated Press

China has become increasingly more proactive and committed to its neighbour Afghanistan’s stability since 2014. That year, Beijing sent no fewer than three high level officials, including Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi, to Afghanistan.

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It also hosted the fourth foreign ministers’ meeting of the annual Heart of Asia process - an effort by the international community launched in late 2011 to engage Afghanistan’s extended neighbours and relevant organisations in the country’s reconstruction. China’s hosting of this event gave the process a big boost.

Following this, China coordinated various meetings on Afghanistan with regional stakeholders, including Iran, Pakistan and Russia.

China has even conversed with representatives of the Taliban, Afghanistan’s primary insurgency group, and is one of the four members of the now dormant and so far ineffective, Quadrilateral Coordination Group. This group, comprised of Afghanistan, China, Pakistan and the US, intends to coordinate Afghan political reconciliation through talks with the Taliban.

In addition, Beijing has committed more aid to Afghanistan, post-2014, than in the entire period from 2001 to 2013.

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