By
Wang Yi, left, the Chinese foreign minister, walking with his
Afghan counterpart,
Salahuddin Rabbani, on Tuesday at the Foreign Ministry in
Credit Pool photo by Mark Schiefelbein
|
BEIJING — Chinese officials are
urging the government of Afghanistan to restart peace talks with the Taliban after the last round of discussions
collapsed, the Chinese Foreign
Ministry has said.
The statement by China late Tuesday was a sign that its
leaders were asserting their commitment to the nascent peace process despite problems after the major
countries involved learned last year that a Taliban founder, Mullah Muhammad
Omar, had been dead for two years. That caused a split in the Taliban ranks and
raised questions among the participants in the talks.
The
Afghan and United States governments are hoping that China will exert greater influence
in the talks on Pakistan , which helped create the
Taliban in the 1990s and is a Chinese ally.
Li
Yuanchao, the Chinese vice president, and Wang Yi, the Chinese foreign
minister, met in Beijing on Tuesday with Salahuddin Rabbani, the Afghan
foreign minister.
Afterward, the Chinese Foreign
Ministry announced: “Wang Yi said that as a peaceful mediator of the Afghan
issue, China supports the ‘Afghan-led and
Afghan-owned’ reconciliation process. China appreciates the move by the
Afghan government to restart the negotiations with the Taliban.”
The announcement said this was
“the right approach to achieve long-term stability in Afghanistan .”
Fighting between the Taliban and the Afghan government has
worsened in the last year, as the Taliban have occupied more land and laid
siege to important cities. The death toll of Afghan soldiers and civilians in
2015 reached its highest point in years.
The Xinjiang region in far
western China shares a border with Afghanistan and Pakistan, and according to
Chinese officials and analysts, Chinese leaders are concerned that ethnic Uighurs in the region are coming under the
influence of violent, radical groups from outside China. Violence between
Uighurs and ethnic Han has been rising in Xinjiang in recent years. Afghan
officials say they have captured dozens of militant Uighurs in Afghanistan .
President Xi Jinping of China has announced strategic
economic plans for China and Central Asia , and a peaceful Afghanistan could play a bigger role in
those plans. According to the Foreign Ministry, Mr. Rabbani told Mr. Wang on
Tuesday that “Afghanistan is willing to continue to expand its mutual interests
with China and actively participate in the construction of ‘One Belt, One
Road,’ ” a reference to the name that Mr. Xi uses for his regional economic
plans.
The Foreign Ministry also listed points on which China and Afghanistan had reached consensus,
including an acknowledgment of Afghanistan ’s desire to be a member of the
Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the Asian Infrastructure
Investment Bank, two multinational institutions of which China was a founder.
On Monday, the day of Mr.
Rabbani’s arrival in China , Peking University , one of the country’s leading
universities, hosted a news conference to discuss a 2015 survey of Afghans
conducted by the Asia Foundation, a nongovernmental organization based in San Francisco . The results showed that
Afghans’ optimism and confidence in their government and their country’s future
had plummeted to the lowest points in a decade. Representatives of Chinese
commercial interests in Afghanistan were at the news conference
and raised questions about the country’s stability.
Follow
Edward Wong on Twitter @comradewong.
Yufan Huang contributed
research.